Obama Commutes Bulk of Chelsea Manning’s Sentence
coloneltcb · 9 years ago
43 comments
coloneltcb · 9 years ago
43 comments
blhack · 9 years ago
Good.
I wish that he would just pardon her, though. I don't want the next administration to somehow undo this.
siegecraft · 9 years ago
Yes, it seems very cowardly and very much passing the buck and doesn't acknowledge that what she did was justified at all, just that mercy was granted.
gph · 9 years ago
Isn't that exactly what Obama was trying for? I've never read any statements from the Obama administration that makes it seem like they find anything about this case justified or acceptable.
detaro · 9 years ago
This quote by a spokesperson in the article supports that: “Chelsea Manning is somebody who went through the military criminal justice process, was exposed to due process, was found guilty, was sentenced for her crimes, and she acknowledged wrongdoing,”
A criminal that's being granted a shorter sentence, not the "support" for someones actions a pardon would be.
wheelerwj · 9 years ago
She can't be tried again though, so how would they undo it?
jandrese · 9 years ago
Midnight assassination squads? They could start digging through laws looking for anything they can make stick (parking violations, jaywalking, etc...), but IMHO the most likely scenario is that nothing further happens to Chelsea Manning. She is yesterday's news. She is never going to work in a government position again, but somehow I don't think that's going to be relevant to her future plans.
r00fus · 9 years ago
Not for the same crimes, of course.
DINKDINK · 9 years ago
Legally they wouldn't be able to convict Manning of the same crime again. The state can do what they do with every dissident; surveil her in the extreme and then prosecute her for some trivial offense.
Law is extremely complex and dense. You have certainly broken laws but haven't been punished for them sole reason that you haven't drawn the ire of the political class.
Do you think it's just mere coincidence that anytime a citizen embarrasses the police they end up being busted for some trivial offense? The Fourth Amendment was designed to prevent the state from harassing citizens and to rate limit the states ability to execute revenge convictions. With everyone having a dossier on them now, the state implicitly chills citizens from pushing back against the government.
voxic11 · 9 years ago
Just order the prison not to release them. That's what Bush did https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Toussie
unclenoriega · 9 years ago
My understanding is that President Bush was able to revoke the pardon because it hadn't been executed yet. This won't be the case with Manning's commutation.
analogmemory · 9 years ago
I was curious and looked up the difference.
http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/story?id=3339765&page=1
A "pardon wipes out the conviction while a commutation leaves the conviction intact but wipes out the punishment."
It seems that the next administration can't do anything about it at least.
464192002d7fe1c · 9 years ago
It won't be undone under Trump. If anything, he would grant immediate clemency or a pardon (though I don't expect either).
dragonwriter · 9 years ago
While the right loves WikiLeaks now, that's all because of Assange's more recent tactions that don't involve Manning; at the time, they wanted Manning and Assange treated as enemy combatants, while that's changed for Assange because he has now served their political interests, I don't see any indication that it has for Manning.
mikeash · 9 years ago
Wouldn't it be outrageously unconstitutional to undo this?
noobermin · 9 years ago
Well given Trump's recent skirting around the emoluments clause...
Let's hope he doesn't do that.
mikeash · 9 years ago
Well, that's why I said "outrageously." It's a lot more clear when there's an obvious wronged party and the outcome is an American in prison when they shouldn't be. It would surely be challenged in court, and won.
cowardlydragon · 9 years ago
We are effectively in a post-constitutional era...
It's been a grey area with NSA spying and many other federal overreaches for a while, but with Trump it's official.
peteretep · 9 years ago
> I don't want the next administration
> to somehow undo this.
Cui bono? What a freakin' distraction that would be.dragonwriter · 9 years ago
Distraction is pretty much the modus operandi of Trump, so...
peteretep · 9 years ago
You know what? That's a great answer, and I hadn't thought of that. It would make an interesting way of distracting from something else.
qz_ · 9 years ago
I hope this will set the tone for how whistleblowers are treated in the future, and I wonder what the President Elect has to say about this.
ssully · 9 years ago
I am confident he will have a few tweets about this before tomorrow morning.
Does anyone know if President Elect Trump has the authority to overturn this sentence commuting?
rosser · 9 years ago
Subsequent presidents can "un-pardon" people pardoned by previous presidents, so I have a hard time imagining that a commutation is somehow immune to that kind of thing.
EDIT: See follow-ups. I may be mistaken here, and need to run to a meeting, so I can't dig any more now.
EDIT 2: http://swampland.time.com/2008/12/25/more-on-pardons/
Relevant quote, "Ulysses S. Grant’s first clemency decision, on his third day in office, was to revoke two pardons granted by Andrew Johnson. Both men challenged Grant’s power to do so, and lost their case in federal court."
EDIT 3: Here's the link to the blog post linked from the Time article, in edit 2, from the Wayback Machine, for sake of completeness.
http://web.archive.org/web/20090212091707/http://pardonpower...
hackuser · 9 years ago
> Subsequent presidents can "un-pardon" people pardoned by previous presidents
I've never heard that, never heard of it happening, and don't believe it's true. However, I've never researched it. Can you cite an example or a source?
rosser · 9 years ago
I remember reading something some time ago about Grant having reversed some of Johnson's pardons, but I'm not finding a reference to specifics, so I may be mistaken.
EDIT: Found it. See my post up-thread for a link.
voxic11 · 9 years ago
IN RE DE PUY, the court found that a prisoner pardoned by the previous administration could have his pardon revoked by the following administration so long as the pardon had not yet been delivered and accepted by the prisoner.
Jtsummers · 9 years ago
How can they unpardon them? The conviction has been undone, and we don't permit double jeopardy (constitutionally prohibited) so a second charge for the same crime can't be filed.
From my brief google searches, it seems that it cannot be undone, by the Congress, by the Courts, nor by the President.
voxic11 · 9 years ago
It can and has been undone before. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isaac_Toussie
unclenoriega · 9 years ago
This is not the same and relies on the pardon/commutation not being fully executed.
jeffcore · 9 years ago
The President doesn't have the power to unilaterally reimpose criminal consequences, which is what an unpardon would amount to. Instead, subsequent Presidents would have to argue the person was never really pardoned in the first place. George W. Bush did this with Isaac Toussie.
hackuser · 9 years ago
To be clear, Bush both pardoned and 'unpardoned' Toussie. He wasn't undoing a prior President's action.
FireBeyond · 9 years ago
Not arbitrarily. If it's a conditional commutation, then there would need to be hearings to document and assert the violations of those conditions first.
TillE · 9 years ago
A 7-year prison sentence is about what you get for horrible violent crime in most of the civilized world. That's not a great "tone" to set.
LordKano · 9 years ago
As the son of a murder victim, 7 years is not enough for horrible, violent crimes.
searine · 9 years ago
I am going to miss Obama.
d33 · 9 years ago
Why?
zeofig · 9 years ago
'Cause it's true, what they say-ooh-ayayy...
godzillabrennus · 9 years ago
He has a likable personality.
BinaryIdiot · 9 years ago
He really does. Regardless of whether you like his politics or not he really seems like a genuine, down to Earth person. He always seems professional and articulate. I will miss that aspect of a president.
mschuster91 · 9 years ago
> He always seems professional and articulate.
Yes, especially in comparison to you-know-who got elected... what a massive contrast.
vorotato · 9 years ago
While he isn't blameless, the ACA helped a lot of people, the economy recovered greatly (admittedly all he had to do was not fuck it up), permitted states to legalize weed. For me I have to say the ACA is probably the biggest reason why I liked him well enough. I was able to stay on my parents insurance until I was 26, and then since I was self-employed I was able to easily get insurance through the marketplace. Now that process I'll admit hasn't been as smooth for everyone, but for me it worked okay.
djsumdog · 9 years ago
There as been more marijuana prosecution under Obama than under Bush. The idea they have been less hostile is a myth. States have simply been doing better at fighting back.
http://www.theweek.co.uk/crime/47303/why-barack-obamas-marij...
ceejayoz · 9 years ago
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/marijuana-arrests-2014_u... very much contradicts your assertion (which isn't backed up anywhere in the article you cite, either).
> At the same time, arrests for the sale and manufacture of marijuana also continued to decrease in 2014. These arrests reached an all-time high of 103,247 in 2010, but they’ve since been falling, reaching a nearly 20-year low of 81,184 last year.
gnaritas · 9 years ago
That's overly simplistic, usage would naturally initially rise due to legalization so naturally so have busts, and prosecution has been more targeted to those who aren't following the state laws and took legalization to mean no rules. In a sense you can look at the DOJ actions as hammering those who thought they could just openly deal drugs without paying attention to the minutia of actually being legally allowed to and following all the necessary rules.
andrewbinstock · 9 years ago
And his support for LGBT issues
joshschreuder · 9 years ago
I look forward to a day where we don't need to celebrate our leaders for basic human decency.
malz · 9 years ago
Or punish our (future) leaders for basic human depravity.
redorb · 9 years ago
This is great and I think pretty easy to see as a good thing by all sides (I hope). I never understand why pardons and this type of thing always seem to have a waiting period though; just being grateful the right thing (As I see it) is being done.
TillE · 9 years ago
Political cowardice, mostly. It's something you can only safely do once you're a lame duck. Not sure why they don't typically do it in December, though.
cableshaft · 9 years ago
Obama has been pardoning people since 2010, and in fact pardoned a whole big chunk of people in December of 2016.
chollida1 · 9 years ago
It's been said that one person's freedom fighter is another's terrorist.
> The files she copied also included about 250,000 diplomatic cables from American embassies around the world showing sensitive deals and conversations, dossiers detailing intelligence assessments of Guantánamo detainees held without trial, and a video of an American helicopter attack in Baghdad in two Reuters journalists were killed, among others.
Has there been any sort of "ethical" system designed to show a person how they are supposed to whistle blow? I'm only familiar with the SEC's guidance, on what they expect you to do and going public isn't one of their main points.
How should a person become a whistle blower like Manning or Snowden while making sure there is no collateral damage to people in the field?
I mean, the main point against Snowden and Manning seems to be that they released way too much information to the public that could be seen as doing more harm than good depending on your point of view.
baybal2 · 9 years ago
He did damn good job!
elliotec · 9 years ago
I don't think anybody has answers to your questions, and there seems to be no solution in sight for these issues.
problems · 9 years ago
If you're knowledgable enough to censor the documents yourself before release, that's the way to go. Not everyone has perfect knowledge. Releasing only to journalists and stuff is a fairly good method too, but maybe create unnecessary exposure.
Manning also went for a bulk dump strategy rather than being selective. Ultimately when you're dealing with a lot of data, that might be the only reasonable way to get it, but leaking unnecessary data where no incriminating evidence is present certainly detracts from the legitimacy of whistleblowing claims. If you can afford the time to be selective in your dumping or at least in your releasing, take it.
Unfortunately some of Manning's stuff got leaked in full, I believe not due to anything of Manning or Wikileaks' fault, but because an uninformed or careless journalist published an insurance key he shouldn't have.
tomp · 9 years ago
Snowden was very selective, and look where that got him...
problems · 9 years ago
Oh yeah, for sure. You aren't getting around the nasty governmental environment towards whistleblowsers. Just improving your image in the eye of some people and your odds if it does come down to a legal matter, really.
Running, like Snowden did is really your best bet there I think. He's pretty much the textbook example of how to do this in the most correct way possible and still keep some degree of freedom for yourself. If you're willing to be a martyr, then you can stand up for that. Some people insist you must.
But I'm more than willing to accept both that someone finds something egregiously offensive that needs to be publicized, but also wants to keep their freedom.
hectorr · 9 years ago
The press was selective in what Snowden released. As far as we know, Snowden wasn't selective in what he obtained, or in what he then provided to adversary intelligence services in China and Russia.
I don't like what Snowden did, but I would respect the hell out of him if he had decided to stand up for his convictions and face the music. He'd have had a far better case, and would have had incredible EFF and ACLU lawyers on his side, and a ton of public sympathy. Instead, he turned an act of patriotism into an act of espionage and treason.
hackinthebochs · 9 years ago
He wasn't very selective. If he were being selective he would only have released information that had constitutional issues. Most of his documents were regarding foreign spying.
teddyh · 9 years ago
Just because something is constitutional does not make it ethical.
hackinthebochs · 9 years ago
Irrelevant when it comes to whistleblowing and legality. The government could not function if people were justified in releasing all information they disagreed with. Surely the set of information related to actions that no one disagrees with is empty or nearly so.
NamTaf · 9 years ago
I don't think it's as black and white as that. Maybe the NSA spying on some overseas entities isn't strictly illegal. But to understand the bigger picture of their all-encompassing reach and sheer pervasiveness better emphasises their wrongdoings on US soil because it helps explain why the NSA's general mentalities of 'we have the right to collect ALL of the information' and 'we are above the law' exist.
Am I saying I think it's outright justified? No, because I'm honestly not sure. I am however sure that it's not as black and white as 'legal' vs 'illegal' when it comes to whistleblowing because the extra infromation helps us establish a context and understand a sense of scale of the wrongdoing, for example.
edit: Here's an example: It's probably not illegal that the 'official' estimates of civilian deaths in the Iraq war were likely far lower than the reality. Assume for the sake of discussion that this was intentional. Having a better understanding the more realistic magnitude of civilian deaths helps the public understand the realities of such wars and helps them make more informed decisions on whether they're comfortable with the actions of their government. It changes the context of the Iraq war and may go from 'we were justified in doing it' to 'it wasn't worth it' for some of the voting public.
hackinthebochs · 9 years ago
I agree with you. I don't have a clear opinion of Snowden. The point was just that those who try to claim he was just blowing the whistle and therefore shouldn't be prosecuted or pardoned are missing the point of whistleblowing with respect to legal protections.
tptacek · 9 years ago
I think reasonable people can disagree about how selective Snowden was.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
Snowden wasn't selective, the journalists he chose were.
As to where it got him-- he actually accomplished his goal, to start a conversation about privacy, government outreach, and secret courts.
Also he's living in Moscow with his girlfriend while Manning rotted in solitary for seven years and attempted suicide several times.
hnbro · 9 years ago
i guess it's always good to have an exit strategy.
dragonwriter · 9 years ago
> Snowden was very selective, and look where that got him...
Snowden leaked to people who were more selective than Manning, at least. And we don't actually know where it would have gotten him with the legal syste, since as well as learning "how to leak" from Manning's negative example, he also seems to have learned "where to be when the leaks become public" by the same method.
bishnu · 9 years ago
There was no collateral damage to people in the field due to the Manning leaks, so I guess she figured it out.
zepto · 9 years ago
How do you know?
efdee · 9 years ago
I believe that we would definitely have been told if there was.
bishnu · 9 years ago
The prosecution admitted as much at her trial. Read up on United States vs Manning for more details.
cm2187 · 9 years ago
I agree. It will make it seriously difficult for anyone to discuss with a US diplomat in confidence given that the guy will log it in his little secure system and that the transcript will be on the web within 5 years. Not really worth risking your life.
I think it is safe to assume this leak will have seriously affected the US diplomacy.
gozur88 · 9 years ago
Even assuming anyone could actually know this, the real damage is going forward. FSOs gather a lot of information just by talking to people, and people are going to be very circumspect if they think what they say will be repeated to the world with attribution. How much would you say to a friend or relative if you knew the first thing they'd do is put up a Facebook post with whatever you told them?
hsod · 9 years ago
From the NYT [0]:
"The disclosures set off a frantic scramble as Obama administration officials sought to minimize any potential harm, including getting to safety some foreigners in dangerous countries who were identified as having helped American troops or diplomats. Prosecutors, however, presented no evidence that anyone was killed because of the leaks."
So no one was killed, but it does seem to have put people at risk.
0: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/17/us/politics/obama-commute...
hendersoon · 9 years ago
That's what they _said_, yes. Remember the rhetoric of the time-- distinguished government officials said both Manning and Snowden had "blood on their hands". Manning was in custody, but multiple senators and representatives called for Snowden to be assassinated.
In summary, I'm gonna need to see some actual proof.
cc_wk · 9 years ago
It has been argued that the diplomatic cables had a strong influence on the uprising in Tunisia after they spread on Facebook and when Bouazizi lit himself on fire the stage was set for their revolution, which was the first domino of what we later called the Arab Spring, which Syria became a part of, but has not resolved for six years.
my_username_is_ · 9 years ago
One of the largest takeaways that I had from most history classes that I took is that events rarely have a single cause--and complex events such as the Arab Spring and Syrian civil war typically have many, many layers of causes (even if they aren't all clear at the time). Insinuating that all of that happened because Pvt. Manning released secret documents does a disservice to any attempt to understand the complex events that we see in the world today.
noobermin · 9 years ago
Okay, so there is punishment say, as some others have said here. Is 7 years enough? She was sentenced to rot in jail till 2045, how can that be just?
dtparr · 9 years ago
From prior discussions, both the DOD[0] and intelligence communities[1] have whistleblower programs. This inevitably leads to questions of whether the DOD/IC IGs can be trusted to investigate the DOD/IC without the forcing function of a public release, but the programs are in place.
[0] - http://www.dodig.mil/programs/whistleblower/index.html
[1] - https://www.dni.gov/index.php/about-this-site/contact-the-ig...
hendersoon · 9 years ago
The top NSA official who would have received Snowden's whistleblowing report was just fired for retaliating against a whistleblower.
Also, Snowden was a contractor not a NSA employee so he wasn't covered by such programs.
Your argument does not hold together.
http://www.pogo.org/blog/2016/12/intelligence-community-land...
dtparr · 9 years ago
I'm not sure what argument you think I was making other than 'yes, whistleblower programs exist' in response to the parent's question of
> Has there been any sort of "ethical" system designed to show a person how they are supposed to whistle blow?
As you helpfully exemplified, many people dismiss the IG's programs due to the potential for (or reality of) retaliation (which I mentioned), but I specifically wanted to avoid that whole set of arguments because there's only so many times I can read through all that.
Also, the first line in the DNI whistleblower program mentions "An IC employee, assignee, detailee, or contractor" so unless that means something other than the plain reading, it would apply to someone today who is similarly situated.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
I read your post as saying they should have followed the chain of command rather than leaking data. I apologize for not catching the nuance in your response.
The WaPo covered Snowden's claims in great detail. Reading it, I certainly would not have felt protected against retaliation myself.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/fact-checker/wp/2014/03/...
chris11 · 9 years ago
Snowden claimed he raised his concerns internally before coming out publicly, but the government denies that. I can't say who is correct, but I don't really trust government agencies to investigate themselves.
cm2187 · 9 years ago
But whistle blowing on what? That the US diplomacy has secret conversations with every one, negiciates deals, and collect information locally in confidence? That's pretty much their job description. What did Manning whistlebow on?
Leaking confidential information isn't whistleblowing.
nothrabannosir · 9 years ago
It's right there in the article:
She copied hundreds of thousands of military incident logs from the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, which, among other things, exposed abuses of detainees by Iraqi military officers working with American forces and showed that civilian deaths in the Iraq war were likely much higher than official estimates.
cm2187 · 9 years ago
That was not in the diplomatic cables. What wrongdoing has been exposed in the diplomatic cables?
hendersoon · 9 years ago
Nothing in particular. That's where Manning went wrong. There was no malfeasance or injustice exposed in the cables. They embarrassed the US and caused diplomatic difficulty for no public gain.
abandonliberty · 9 years ago
This isn't about ethics. It's about power.
Whistleblowing is the powerless and disconnected eroding the power of the powerful and well connected.
They don't appreciate that.
As a result, nearly every whistleblower will suffer greatly for their actions no matter how they do it - unless they can curry favor of the powerful somehow. Public perception can be purchased.
For further enlightenment I recommend the 20 minute youtube video Rules for Rulers by CGP, as well as the followup.
cushychicken · 9 years ago
Malcolm Gladwell wrote a fascinating piece for the New Yorker last month that reviews the "etiquette" (for want of a better word here - maybe "procedure"?) of government leaks and whistleblowing.
http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2016/12/19/daniel-ellsberg...
Long story short - leaks are a desirable thing for the executive branch, but there is a "right" way to do them. Snowden and Manning did them the "wrong" way, and it's implied that that is one of the reasons they both had the book thrown at them.
headcanon · 9 years ago
how much you wanna bet that Julian Assange will conveniently forget his agreement to be extradited if Manning gets pardoned? https://www.yahoo.com/news/assange-agrees-extradition-us-rel...
noja · 9 years ago
He didn't pardon her.
skolos · 9 years ago
The article was talking about clemency, not pardon.
cadlin · 9 years ago
This DoJ list of clemency recipients includes both pardons and commutations.
ceejayoz · 9 years ago
https://twitter.com/wikileaks/status/819630102787059713
"If Obama grants Manning clemency Assange will agree to US extradition despite clear unconstitutionality of DoJ case"
mona_simpson · 9 years ago
Forget what? There was no pardon by Obama, so that agreement does not apply.
Why would you want to detract from the good news of Chelsea having a release date in the very near future and conflate that with a different issue regarding Assange?
detaro · 9 years ago
If Obama grants Manning clemency Assange will agree to US extradition despite clear unconstitutionality of DoJ case
https://twitter.com/wikileaks/status/819630102787059713
Commuting the sentence is "granting clemency", isn't it?
nothrabannosir · 9 years ago
"If Obama grants Manning clemency Assange will agree to US extradition despite clear unconstitutionality of DoJ (US Department of Justice) case," WikiLeaks wrote on Twitter.
- https://www.yahoo.com/news/assange-agrees-extradition-us-rel...
What is the difference between a commutation of sentence and a pardon?
In the federal system, commutation of sentence and pardon are different forms of executive clemency, which is a broad term that applies to the President’s constitutional power to exercise leniency toward persons who have committed federal crimes.
- https://www.justice.gov/pardon/frequently-asked-questions-co...
I.e.: commutation ∈ clemency.
lqdc13 · 9 years ago
So let's pretend the sentence was reduced by a week instead. Would that still be the same thing?
Analemma_ · 9 years ago
Then Obama's action would be the letter of clemency but not the spirit, and there would be room for disagreement about whether Assange should keep his word.
But since that's not what happened and Obama's actual action honors both the letter and the spirit of clemency, there's nothing worth debating here.
lqdc13 · 9 years ago
Didn't realize the sentence was reduced by so much. Apparently only a few months are left in the sentence.
rad88 · 9 years ago
It wouldn't be the same thing. But that didn't happen, her sentence was reduced by 2-3 decades and she'll be out in a few months. It's clearly clemency.
_jordan_green · 9 years ago
That's a very interesting scenario, Mr Devil's Advocate
skolos · 9 years ago
"If Obama grants Manning clemency Assange will agree to US extradition despite clear unconstitutionality of DoJ (US Department of Justice) case," WikiLeaks wrote on Twitter.
notahacker · 9 years ago
convenient for him to agree to be extradited to a country that hasn't requested his extradition, not the one that has...
zepto · 9 years ago
That can be changed
Analemma_ · 9 years ago
I know these days we're all treating it as an established fact that Sweden's extradition request for Assange is actually a cover for him to be further extradited to the United States, but it has never actually been proven.
jacobush · 9 years ago
Given how Swedish ministers dirtied their hands when the MPAA wanted them to interfere in Pirate Bay investigations... I will require proof they WOULD NOT say "how high?" if the Dept of Justice of the USA asked them to jump.
lettergram · 9 years ago
Didn't the women drop all charges, if they even charged him in the first place?
I think it's fair to assume, given the circumstances
notahacker · 9 years ago
No, the case was originally reopened at the request of their lawyer, and we have relatively recent statements from them insisting they want the case to proceed
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/julian-assange-rape...
chippy · 9 years ago
I have heard that it's impossible to prove. Sweden cannot say "this will not happen" as they cannot see the future and the US cannot say "we will not issue a request" as they cannot issue one until he is Sweden. The US could say what their intentions are though.
kordless · 9 years ago
Which means Assange knew it was a double bind when he said what he said. They never tried to extradite him, even if it was implied. This now means that everyone expects the US to extradite him, which is what they were trying to avoid to begin with by extraditing him to Sweden. And, if they do extradite him, the US will have to come up with a reason why they didn't to begin with.
Brilliant move and interesting timing. This chess match is just getting going.
notahacker · 9 years ago
Why would the US show the slightest inclination to change to its longstanding policy of not showing any interest in extraditing Assange based on a tweet?
kordless · 9 years ago
That is an unanswerable question, given the current lack of data.
plugger · 9 years ago
What happens if the US accepts his offer, extradites him to the US, and then immediately extradites him to Sweden at their request? It would effectively blow up his continual insistence that the Swedish extradition is nothing more than a smokescreen to get him to the US.
zeofig · 9 years ago
Not nearly as much as the amount I would bet that Manning will never get pardoned.
464192002d7fe1c · 9 years ago
the clemency is also 6 months into the future. presumably, at that time, things will in a slightly less absurdist position for someone like him. I cannot imagine him getting anything resembling a fair trial right now. In 6 months? sure.
RubenSandwich · 9 years ago
I would not be surprised if he does not honor that as the incoming president will likely be even harsher on an Assange trial then an Obama presidency would be.
csours · 9 years ago
Assange has only to say something nice about Trump, and all will be forgiven[0].
0. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/09/08/do...
imron · 9 years ago
Don't bet too much:
"Assange lawyer @themtchair on Assange-Manning extradition 'deal': "Everything that he has said he's standing by.""
temp-dude-87844 · 9 years ago
Sadly, this act was just another political tool to contrast with Snowden.
Quote from the article:
the White House spokesman, Joshua Earnest, discussed the "pretty stark difference" between Ms. Manning's case for mercy with Mr. Snowden's. While their offenses were similar, he said, there were "some important differences."
"Chelsea Manning is somebody who went through the military criminal justice process, was exposed to due process, was found guilty, was sentenced for her crimes, and she acknowledged wrongdoing," he said. "Mr. Snowden fled into the arms of an adversary, and has sought refuge in a country that most recently made a concerted effort to undermine confidence in our democracy."
He also noted that while the documents Ms. Manning provided to WikiLeaks were "damaging to national security," the ones Mr. Snowden disclosed were "far more serious and far more dangerous." (None of the documents Ms. Manning disclosed were classified above the merely "secret" level.)
flanbiscuit · 9 years ago
Now pardon Snowden
djsumdog · 9 years ago
And admit you're the cause of the Assange investigation which has kept him locked up in an embassy for years as well.
464192002d7fe1c · 9 years ago
Seriously. This is such terrible backroom political manipulation. The real thing that worries me is what exactly are we using to leverage sweden to go after assange this hard. What damage has obama done to our relationship with them?
jacobush · 9 years ago
Don't worry. You maybe threatened there will be no dessert after dinner. Do I sound bitter?
runevault · 9 years ago
I sort of wonder if it would matter. Whether they should or not, I really doubt the parts of the government he pissed off will forgive him just because they are told to.
vinay427 · 9 years ago
A pardon would allow him a valid passport to travel to a different country that would be willing to house him without having to ignore extradition requests. He would not need to return to the US if he felt endangered there.
runevault · 9 years ago
Okay THAT is a good reason then. Thanks for the correction.
vvpan · 9 years ago
Sigh... The scheming and carefully crafted rhetoric that White House has developed against Snowden is just plain disgusting.
andrewclunn · 9 years ago
Ironically, Snowden likely skipped the country as part of his leak precisely because of what had happened to Manning. Claiming that there's mercy for him if he comes back for a last minute commute by an outgoing President after 7 years... I mean, who do they think they're fooling?
vvpan · 9 years ago
Precedents set for whistelblower treatment have not been very good the past decade.
djsumdog · 9 years ago
Seven years is still a long time for whistle blowing. I'm glad to see she is still getting released though. It's important to note commuting the sentence is not a pardon. Chelsea will still have this conviction for the rest of her life.
I know there is a lot of controversy with Manning compared to Wikileaks et. al. as far as not redacting documents or using a discriminating news source to filter them. Still, I oppose state secrets and the Hillary e-mails are actually very chilling when you start reading through them. I still side with Manning. Too many of the Snowden documents were redacted with critical information (like which hardware encryption chips were compromised by the US government). No one has the actual Pentagon Papers outside of very specific news agencies. Manning gave the entire story to the people .. and I find it more sad that we didn't see more outrage and change from that release.
I also see another message here. Obama is trying to leave a positive view of the Democratic legacy with this lasting memory. It helps people forget about the predator drones, secret kill lists, continuation of torture, NSA spying and the expansion of war, military and the American hegemony throughout the world. I wish people would see this manipulation; this handout to the left to keep them angry at the incoming administration and not at the government that continues to spy on them and kill people without trial in and endless sea of never ending conflict.
rthomas6 · 9 years ago
I have mixed feelings on this. Manning did commit a crime. They were entrusted with classified information and they released it on purpose. For all of the corruption and wrongdoing the release of those cables uncovered, didn't it also do things like give away the positions of some undercover agents? And harm US diplomatic relations with other countries? Look at it from the POV of the government: How could they not punish Manning? It would do a lot to encourage others to indiscriminately leak classified info. Which would be bad.
mhurron · 9 years ago
Classifying material should not be a way for the Government to hide corruption and wrongdoing. Whistle blowing is the only way that prevents that.
Chelsea Manning acted on her conscience, which is the best we can expect anyone to do. The governments punishment was to prevent that happening again.
ythn · 9 years ago
You can spin any type of classified material as "corruption" and "wrongdoing". Who draws the line?
What if someone indiscriminately leaked everything on the Manhattan project during WW2? Would they be a hero because they "acted on their conscience" and showed the world that the big bad USA was secretly developing WMDs? Or would they be a villain because they just taught other countries how to do the same? To the peace loving left he would be a hero, to the nationalist right he would be an enemy.
Bradley/Chelsea Manning is no different.
chc · 9 years ago
Do you really believe that the government should be able to do whatever it wants in any area with no transparency or oversight? That's what you're saying — that nobody should be allowed to disclose something that government officials don't want them to, without any further consideration — but I have trouble believing that's what you mean to say.
hackinthebochs · 9 years ago
>That's what you're saying
No thats not what's being said. I would hope we could all be above strawmen.
chc · 9 years ago
As I said, I have a hard time believing that is what's meant, but I think that is a pretty fair summary of the big-picture implications of that proposal. If you don't think so, please explain how rather than throwing out the word "strawmen" and pretending you've debunked something.
rudolf0 · 9 years ago
Little unethical behavior was actually leaked, though. The killing of the Reuters journalists probably should've been leaked since there was a sort of cover-up (government refused to give Reuters the video or concrete details), so I'll give her that.
But the rest was basically just normal communications.
I think she's served more than enough jail time, but this didn't really seem like a conscience-driven whistleblowing to me.
Snowden, on the other hand, leaked some seriously shady and unconstitutional activity (along with other things that IMO did not need to be released publicly). That very much did seem like he leaked it due to his conscience.
vkou · 9 years ago
> But the rest was basically just normal communications.
Which may have had wide-reaching consequences, with respect to the Arab Spring.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
"May"? We're way past "may". The Arab Spring was catastrophic.
vkou · 9 years ago
What part of it can be attributed to Manning..? And what part of it can be contributed to food insecurity, economic downturns, the despots running those countries tightening the screws, the CIA's involvement, a civil war in Iraq, the Department of State jumping on the opportunity to stick it to Putin by destabilizing Assad?
Are any other architects of these disasters serving 35 years?
hendersoon · 9 years ago
That's impossible to measure quantitatively. It's very clear that the leaks contributed to some degree, much like the email leaks and FBI notes to congress contributed to the election results, but how much? Nobody will ever know.
vkou · 9 years ago
My point is that if you want to crucify Manning for starting the Arab Spring, there's a long, long line of people, who were actually responsible for the problems she exposed.
danenania · 9 years ago
It was catastrophic because despotism fought back and (mostly) won. But that doesn't mean the uprisings or the actions leading to it were wrong or futile. It's a long road.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
Yes, the results were catastrophic, even though the protests themselves had pure motives. But results matter.
revelation · 9 years ago
Some serious amnesia in this thread. But the reaction is all too common, people who just go "we knew all of that already" and switch back to sports while others out there risk their life to produce the documents that can bring about actual change.
Even if you don't care for the content of the cables, the fact that an estimated 3 million people have access to them with nothing worth mentioning in the form of access control should give you serious pause. The 1% are real, they are just not all billionaires.
meowface · 9 years ago
> the fact that an estimated 3 million people have access to them with nothing worth mentioning in the form of access control should give you serious pause. The 1% are real, they are just not all billionaires.
Ok... there are probably far, far worse hidden scandals in terms of access control/data security in the US government. I don't see your point. I don't think that's the point anyone was trying to make. It's bad, for sure, but it doesn't warrant leaking all of the documents.
>while others out there risk their life to produce the documents that can bring about actual change.
What in the diplomatic cables brought, or could have brought, actual change?
NSA surveillance leaks could (and, to a small extent, did) bring about actual change. The cables accomplished nothing positive for anyone.
ionised · 9 years ago
> NSA surveillance leaks could (and, to a small extent, did) bring about actual change. The cables accomplished nothing positive for anyone.
I don't know, it taught me a lot about the US attitude towards the rest of the world. I feel that is worth knowing.
l33tbro · 9 years ago
Could you please elaborate on this? I recently had dinner with a friend in intelligence, who was trying to convince me that Snowden was in bed with Russia from the get-go, and that the 90% of the leak had nothing to do with privacy concerns.
I took his opinions with a grain of salt given his background, but also couldn't refute due to being relatively unfamiliar with the Snowden saga.
danenania · 9 years ago
Every bit of the leak was about mass surveillance--how could it not have to do with privacy concerns?
The "in bed with Russia" thing is just a smear. No one has produced any evidence of this, and it's really hard to make it match up with how everything unfolded.
SilasX · 9 years ago
And if someone did produce such evidence, they would be obligated to ask for that very same person's arrest for the breach of trust involved in such wistleblowing!
sintaxi · 9 years ago
Good grief, Your friend actually said that with a straight face?
l33tbro · 9 years ago
Perhaps attributed to the infamous Upton Sinclair quote:
"It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it."
EdHominem · 9 years ago
Your friend is full of shit. If they knew anything real they wouldn't be allowed to tell you.
The biggest clue that what your friend says is wrong that Snowden wouldn't have gone public and announced himself if he was spying for Russia.
rudolf0 · 9 years ago
Russia was one of his last choices as a refuge; they were just one of the only countries to accept him.
I doubt he's fond of Russia, either, and he's made some passive-aggressive jabs at them on his Twitter.
That said, it can't be ruled out that he divulged even more secret information to Russia's intelligence services as a condition for asylum, but I don't think there's any evidence it was one of his motives when leaking.
TheCoelacanth · 9 years ago
He wasn't even trying to stay in Russia. He was just traveling through on his way to Ecuador but he got stuck there because the US revoked his passport.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
That is the consensus of US intelligence, yeah, but they have no actual proof. Basically it's his word against their hypothesis.
Do you really believe Snowden was a double-agent, or that he was a conscientious whistle-blower? That's what it comes down to.
GVIrish · 9 years ago
Where Manning went wrong was the indiscriminate nature of the leaking. Had Manning just divulged only the information regarding specific acts of wrongdoing, she would have had a much stronger case as a whistleblower. Dumping troves of classified material without regard to their contents is not the same thing.
If someone working in medical records uncovered insurance fraud, but put thousands of people's full records out on the internet (instead of a targeted disclosure), they would absolutely civil lawsuits and criminal penalties. Even if their original intent was noble, their actions would be subject to punishment.
The ends don't always justify the means.
dogma1138 · 9 years ago
Manning was in the military regardless of what and how it was released there is no possibility for "public interest" defense in this case. Neither does Snowden since he will be charged with espionage.
colechristensen · 9 years ago
Snowden released a large volume of information to well qualified journalists who very carefully combed through the data to find the things most relevant and important for the American public to know. Information that was legitimately classified and had no whistleblowing value simply wasn't released.
Manning released a large volume of information to the public en masse with no regard to it's whistleblowing value. Some of that information was dangerous and harmful.
Manning's battering ram is much different than Snowden's scalpel, even though their base motivations had a lot in common. Snowden knew what he was doing and did it with great care and consideration. Manning was suffering from some serious mental health issues and did something foolish with questionable value at best.
mhurron · 9 years ago
> Some of that information was dangerous and harmful.
So dangerous and harmful that it harmed no one.
criddell · 9 years ago
Dangerous and harmful to the US government?
rbanffy · 9 years ago
> Manning released a large volume of information to the public en masse
No. She leaked the documents to Wikileaks, who decided to publish them uncensored. She had no control over what Wikileaks would do. Other media outlets opted not to release information they considered dangerous.
And, as @mhurron pointed out, there is no record of someone who was harmed by that information being released.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
There is no record of any individual being physically harmed, but the leaked diplomatic cables were highly embarrassing, hurt the interests of the US, and were completely unjustified. They weren't exposing malfeasance or war crimes. They should not have been released.
Manning did it wrong, Snowden did it right.
dragonwriter · 9 years ago
> Manning did it wrong, Snowden did it right.
AFAIK, both Manning and Snowden released large quantities of information without reviewing all of it in detail for public interest vs. potential harm, and released it not to the public but to third parties that managed public release. The difference is that Manning released it to Assange and Snowden released it to more responsible journalists.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
Yes, that is completely correct.
Snowden released his information to journalists who carefully vetted each item for newsworthiness with the participation of the US government. Then that data was parceled out over many months, so it would remain in daily news cycles and continue to generate commentary over that time, staying in the public's mind.
Manning gave her data to Wikileaks, who posted it online in its entirety.
lern_too_spel · 9 years ago
When did The Guardian or the South China Morning Post vet anything with the US government?
stevehb · 9 years ago
The Guardian ran everything by the US government first before publishing. Every responsible journalist does. They're looking for a response or comment to the story, to make sure they didn't get anything wrong, and to see if there's a any reason to withhold details (a reason beyond "It's classified so don't").
In fact, in Greenwald's book No Place to Hide, he describes how they held off publishing for several days while waiting for a response from the government. Greenwald was so frustrated with the delays that he considered quitting the Guardian and going on his own. I think that's the idea that eventually turned into The Intercept.
lern_too_spel · 9 years ago
If that's the case, how did they get almost everything wrong? Reading the original stories on The Guardian, I couldn't find any response from the US government.
Why did you ignore the SCMP entirely?
nickpsecurity · 9 years ago
"The difference is that Manning released it to Assange and Snowden released it to more responsible journalists."
Sort of. They're more responsible in the general sense but also foreign journalists receiving U.S.'s spying capabilities on foreign persons. The aiding and abetting concept is quite appropriate given they published all kinds of NSA attack strategies & subverted companies while the foreign attacks & companies... including in their own countries... didn't get the same treatment. Both attack and defense on the other side got a great boost while U.S. companies simultaneously lost market share.
Quite a bit of damage giving stuff foreigners shouldn't know to foreign journalists. I might be happier if there was a Snowden in all 20+ countries involved in economic and industrial espionage. Instead, it was just what mainly two (U.S. and U.K.) were doing outside the many eyes partnership that extends to Europe. Quite asymmetrical.
gjjrfcbugxbhf · 9 years ago
This is wonderful FUD and misdirection. I will bookmark to use as a reference for when I want to careful discredit someone.
nickpsecurity · 9 years ago
Your comment is simple trolling. Most nations in the Snowden leaks spy on each other with humans and hacking. Only a few had their tools leaked by Snowden. Others, with spy & surveillance programs still running. immediately used that as political and economic leverage. That leaks damaged one set of countries while giving others benefits is a fact.
The real question is whether there is a greater good to that damage justifying it. I think there was for the domestic leaks but not the foreign ones outside a few. Far as that few, the Belgacom attack is a good example where taking down allies' telecoms over bullshit could have consequences for America past the usual info collection the spies do. Americans should have a conversation about that kind of thing before those acting on our behalf do such acts.
general_ai · 9 years ago
>> The difference is that Manning released it to Assange and >> Snowden released it to more responsible journalists.
As we all know by now, it's illegal to read the leaks unless they're on CNN. "Responsible" journalists from CNN told us as much.
jacobush · 9 years ago
Snowden also had hindsight of sorts, "don't release it to Assange" was probably pretty obvious.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
Absolutely. Whether you attribute his superior strategy to learning from Manning's mistake or his own native intelligence, there's simply no doubt that Snowden leaked his data in a more effective and less damaging way.
mcv · 9 years ago
He learned not just from Manning, but also from Thomas Drake and other NSA whistleblowers before him.
DonHopkins · 9 years ago
The fact that the US murdered innocent civilians was highly embarrassing and hurt the interests of the US, not the fact that Manning leaked that information itself. Punish the murderers, not the messengers. The only people were actually harmed were the innocent children and journalists on the receiving end of US machine guns.
mcv · 9 years ago
This exactly. Governments do need to be held accountable for secret crimes, secrecy should not be allowed to enable continuing those crimes. Exposing them was necessary, even if it was illegal.
I do think Manning was naive and sloppy for handing the whole thing over to Assange, though in her defense, Assange seemed fairly reasonable and responsible at the time. It's only after this enormous leak that he seems to have gone mad with power.
wallace_f · 9 years ago
I can sleep a lot better tonight having read this thread of thoughts after some of the awfulness I just read over at reddit.
With this issue there is a remarkable degree of misinformation, as well as fascist ideology supporting the the surveillance state. These neverending, unechecked powers undermine civil rights and allow human rights abuses to go continue. And it's all wrapped in this package of 'a good liberal just supporting the good guys like Obama and Hillary that evil Assange is trying to destroy.' Assange is far from perfect, but I cannot understand how people do not fight back in solidarity with outrage against human and civil rights abuses.
grandalf · 9 years ago
> I cannot understand how people do not fight back in solidarity with outrage against human and civil rights abuses
I think there is a very sad aspect of human nature which makes humans bow before power.
zemanel · 9 years ago
It's called mortality :) people have X years to live and try to make the best of it and not everyone is ready to sacrifice that time for doing the right thing.
newbear · 9 years ago
The simple fact that other people are unjustly suffering means that my mortality of x years is not the best. I think this alone should make everyone want to help make the world the best it can be. But empathy and love loses to selfishness and greed.
NotSammyHagar · 9 years ago
Thank you for your comments. You have it exactly right, re-affirming my hope that the world is not doomed. Another example in line with what you said, having secret prisons that we kidnapped people and took them to and tortured them during the second bush war in Iraq hurt the US. It hurt because because we had secret prisons.
cmdrfred · 9 years ago
In my opinion the solution to not being embarrassed is to not do embarrassing things. The person exposeing those things isn't in the wrong, you are.
Keep in mind all of the recent leaks have been from individuals and organizations that have supported domestic spying under the rationale "if you've got nothing to hide". Yet they hide in shadows and evidently misbehave when the public isn't looking.
nickpsecurity · 9 years ago
"In my opinion the solution to not being embarrassed is to not do embarrassing things. "
That was the government's position against Snowden, Wikileaks, etc. Also called the "Safe if Nothing to Hide" fallacy. What secrets can cause damage in what ways is pretty broad and arbitrary. Interestingly, it applies to the government's schemes much like people's, private lives. We have to keep them in check more but that should be done by citizens leaning on various branches of government. Including groups doing something about problems in GAO reports.
Really easy to say, though, to never piss off any important person in any foreign country or company with one's private decisions or actions. Really hard to do, too.
nickpsecurity · 9 years ago
I see what you're saying here but it might not be so simple. These types of countries are all competing doing all kinds of evil stuff to do so. All or most would have to be hit with whistleblowing & often for what you say to matter. What we've seen is large scale whistleblowing in some countries but not others. A few of those crying "Foul!" are almost certainly doing equivalent or worse but benefit from being the moral, high ground.
The result: a whistleblower for one just gives a competitive advantage to the others. So, both the country's policy and the whistleblower shifting people or investments to other scheming countries or companies are each causing damage.
rbanffy · 9 years ago
A country is hit by whistleblowers when these people find their government doing things that are against their principles. That's much harder to happen when the people employed has no such thing.
nickpsecurity · 9 years ago
The country is hit by "leakers" when arbitrary people on inside leak secrets for arbitrary reasons. Even the leakers themselves disagreed on morality of various things at various points. The problem is much broader and more subjective than you're hinting at if we adopted a policy of letting anyone leak anything they personally thought was bad. Especially if only one country in a world of nations competing was doing it.
rbanffy · 9 years ago
The people of any country where would-be leakers are summarily executed for treason will not know what its government is hiding from them. Sometimes governments hide things for good reasons but, sometimes, the very crimes the government commits in order to protect the country's principles end up undermining those.
nickpsecurity · 9 years ago
I dont disagree. Im pro leaking of evidence of crimes. That's whistleblowing. Manning did a lot more than that, though. So, your point is a strawman better suited for someone like Binney who only discussed corruption instead of huge, raw dump.
Buge · 9 years ago
Did the diplomatic cables contain information that the US murdered innocent civilians?
DonHopkins · 9 years ago
The more important question is: did the US murder innocent civilians? It's not about the cables or the messenger or the medium or the style and presentation, it's about the murdered innocent civilians.
The debt we owe Manning for exposing the fact that the US murdered innocent civilians far outweighs the damage she did by releasing the cables. The prosecution couldn't identify anyone who was harmed, beyond those innocents harmed by the US government machine guns, which wasn't Manning's fault.
rbanffy · 9 years ago
When I was a kid, they were never innocent. They were all Russian agents and the puppet dictators put in place by the US were protecting their countries from communism.
A people deserves to know what their government did on their behalf.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
I was specifically talking about leaking the diplomatic cables-- that wasn't OK.
Chelsea had a moral imperative to leak the murder of innocent civilians by the US military. But she should have stopped there.
harry8 · 9 years ago
Manning intended to remain anonymous. Snowden always intended to take personal public responsibility for his whistleblowing.
They did it different, different tools for different purposes. Comparing them like for like is not a good comparison.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
Snowden took personal responsibility for a single reason-- so the news would talk about the leaks, rather than the effort to find the leaker. He didn't want the conversation to be about Edward Snowden. He was largely successful.
crpatino · 9 years ago
When you go around doing reprehensible things, you deserve humiliation and embarrasment.
More over, if some of those reprehensible things you did, you happen to have done to your own allies, it means they are entitled to have second thoughts about whether they will want to continue aligning their interest to yours, or if they should be more assertive in the future to compensate for the cost of doing business with you.
So, you can keep shooting at the messanger all you want, but any bad outcomes comming out of this, you brought to yourselves.
andrewflnr · 9 years ago
She had this much control over what WikiLeaks would do: she could have given them less.
boomboomsubban · 9 years ago
How much time do you think someone on active duty in Iraq has to sort through data?
nerfhammer · 9 years ago
Manning was on leave at the time FWIW
boomboomsubban · 9 years ago
A two week leave, that's asking her to check well over 10,000 documents a day.
the_trapper · 9 years ago
> How much time do you think someone on active duty in Iraq has to sort through data?
You've clearly never been deployed. You have more free time than you know what to do with.
Think about what you do when you get off shift at your job. Now remember that you have no family or friends that aren't also co-workers to hang out with. No alcohol, limited access to new movies and video games. You are also stuck within the confines of whatever base you're assigned to. If you're lucky there might be a one-screen movie theater or an internet café. You might even be able to get severely bandwidth-capped satellite internet in your tent/third-of-a-trailer-shared-with-a-roommate that you call your room.
Despite what you want to believe about Manning, lack of time was no excuse for indiscriminate leaking of sensitive information that honestly and truly put lives at risk.
boomboomsubban · 9 years ago
And you think you could use that free time to sort through thousands of pages of classified documents without your fellow soldiers or your superiors knowing? Time isn't the only relevant resource.
Maybe I'm an asshole, but the "put lives at risk" line seems like nationalistic swill. Even if it risked American combatants, why should that justify hiding the deaths of possibly fifteen thousand Iraqi civilians?
golergka · 9 years ago
How does it not justify it? Deaths that already happen vs quite real damage that you cause in the future?
boomboomsubban · 9 years ago
It isn't "quite real damage," it's potential damage. Without revealing and adressing the past deaths, you can expect there to be future deaths. The point of revealing isn't to say "hey we did awful shit," it's to say "we're doing awful shit and it needs to stop."
EdHominem · 9 years ago
I'd call the cops on bank robbers even knowing they may get "damaged" during capture because I think the benefits to society outweighs the harm.
Besides, we saw ~10 people blown away in that one video. That's a fair number of eggs you'd get to break by leaking before even being at parity with that one instance, let alone all the others.
golergka · 9 years ago
Repeating a discussion that is being mad in a neoghbour thread, I don't see any criminal or even incorrecr decisions by US military in that video. Making decisions based on incomplete information, with certain risk of bad outcomes abd collateral damage is a part of war.
fornever · 9 years ago
> I don't see any criminal or even incorrecr decisions by US military in that video. Making decisions based on incomplete information, with certain risk of bad outcomes abd collateral damage is a part of war.
So to paraphrase "they did nothing wrong and even if they did it would have been okay".
First, they clearly shot civilians trying to take other civilians to the hospital by essentially inventing weapons they didn't and couldn't have seen. Secondly, in most countries when you get the responsibility to fly something like an attack helicopter, which takes a fairly long time to learn, you tend to have to be better than some random soldier. The "war is hell" excuse isn't really viable with the attitudes displayed in the video. But if you're trying to say that these are the kind of actions we should expect when the US invades a country then I guess we are in agreement.
golergka · 9 years ago
How exactly could've you made out these figures as civilians and not enemy combatants? From POV of the camera, you already have seen one of them with an RPG, and the opposing force doesn't really use uniforms either.
Don't fall for a logical fallacy, and try to view the situatiom from the lens of the information that they actually had, not the hindsight.
fornever · 9 years ago
International law and the rules of engagement requires you to positively identify enemy combatant as well as not engage enemy combatant that are incapacitated. There's nothing in the video indicating that they person getting picked up by the van or that the people picking him up has weapons.
(from the transcript [0])
05:30 There's one guy moving down there but he's uh, he's wounded. ... 06:01 He's getting up. 06:02 Maybe he has a weapon down in his hand? 06:04 No, I haven't seen one yet. ... 06:33 Come on, buddy. 06:38 All you gotta do is pick up a weapon. ... 06:54 This is Two-Six roger. I'll pop flares [drop flares]. We also have one individual moving. We're looking for weapons. If we see a weapon, we're gonna engage. ... 07:18 Bushmaster; Crazyhorse. We have individuals going to the scene, looks like possibly uh picking up bodies and weapons. .... 07:36 Picking up the wounded? 07:38 Yeah, we're trying to get permission to engage. ... 07:59 Roger. We have a black SUV-uh Bongo truck [van] picking up the bodies. Request permission to engage.
There's nothing unclear here or anything to be misunderstood. If they had seen weapons they would have engaged already instead of asking for permission. It's just that the crew of the helicopter really wants to shoot them and that they, the US military nor the US public don't really give a shit if they are civilian as long as they can get away with it, which they can.
[0] https://collateralmurder.wikileaks.org/en/transcript.html
hendersoon · 9 years ago
Exactly right. These really were war crimes, and Chelsea did have a moral imperative to leak them.
boomboomsubban · 9 years ago
Let's give you the benefit of the doubt, not necessarily earned as the other poster points out but let's roll with it. You have successfully defended between two and eleven civilian deaths that were not hidden before the leaks. That leaves you merely with the task of explaining the around twelve thousand that were hidden prior to the leaks.
EdHominem · 9 years ago
Let's even pretend that the pilots are totally blameless. The military covered this up. They don't get to cover things up, because that's how we get war crimes.
Had this been reviewed properly, yes. A "Mistakes Happen" stamp could probably be used. But by hiding it and lying about it, they turned it into something we can't ignore.
Also, I don't think the pilots are blameless. If they ever hit civilian court that transcript would hang them.
the_trapper · 9 years ago
> And you think you could use that free time to sort through thousands of pages of classified documents without your fellow soldiers or your superiors knowing?
Most of the military intelligence Soldiers I deployed with brought their own personal laptops.
You really underestimate how much free alone time is available to you when you are deployed. Remember that Manning was also kind of a black sheep at the time. Spending hours alone on a laptop would not have been seen as out of the ordinary at all.
boomboomsubban · 9 years ago
I don't question the free time, I doubt the ability for someone already under a fair amount of emotional distress to be able to hide reading thousands of pages of classified data.
Even with the route she took, it was only a matter of months for her to make a mistake that got her arrested. Giving it to wikileaks reduced her anxiety, going through it likely would have ramped it up. Additionally, needing to keep a local copy of the data is a huge risk.
angry_octet · 9 years ago
This is exactly the sort of thing intellos do all day if they are good. The only covert part was the exfil.
I don't think the war diary stuff made much of an impact, or the apache video. The diplomatic traffic OTOH was the spark into the tinder of the middle east autocracies that set off the so-called Arab Spring.
smallnamespace · 9 years ago
> She had no control over what Wikileaks would do
Then she should've released it to someone else. She is ultimately responsible for deciding to give it to Wikileaks.
EdHominem · 9 years ago
Yeah, focus your outrage on the leaker not the murderers or the cover-up.
Neither reason nor morality made our government listen to criticism from within but maybe the pain of suffering these leaks will.
scrollaway · 9 years ago
You're mistaking hindsight for outrage.
EdHominem · 9 years ago
Nope, the thing that triggered Manning to leak was being told to ignore evidence and collaborate in framing innocent Iraqis for treason.
nickpsecurity · 9 years ago
"She leaked the documents to Wikileaks, who decided to publish them uncensored. She had no control over what Wikileaks would do."
The first part of your sentence shows why the second part is nonsense. Manning dumped a bunch of classified information on a third party. Manning left the ethical decisions to that third party. That is certainly preventable as many others have prevented it. I've done so many times with confidential information that I make public in a selective way in my writing that protects sources or just details that must be private.
Truth is Manning's mind was messed up due to internal struggles, she also saw messed up stuff in military, and simultaneously was blindly trusting third parties to make the right decisions. The combination led to a damaging, criminal decision to turn all of that over to Wikileaks rather than pure whistleblowing of combing for corruption to selectively leak and/or redact. This is what she was rightly punished for although how the punishment was delivered was cruel and should've been illegal.
Glad Manning is to be released soon but she set it in motion with foolish decisions that had alternatives. It certainly wasn't an inevitable set of cause and effect.
EdHominem · 9 years ago
> she also saw messed up stuff in military
Yes, like her supervisor being absolutely willing to go along with faking information against innocent Iraqis that got them jailed and killed.
> damaging, criminal decision to turn all of that over to Wikileaks rather than pure whistleblowing
Ummm, her commanders refused to listen to pure whistleblowing. Didn't you read about the case?
As someone required to report a crime, you aren't required to put in a show of effort and declare it done, you're required to do your best to stop it.
> Manning left the ethical decisions to that third party.
No, Manning made the ethical decision knowing what Wikileaks promised - to get the information seen. And she made the right one.
SCHiM · 9 years ago
Also the article states tat manning tried to approach the NYT and washington post, but was refused/ignored.
nerfhammer · 9 years ago
Manning made some very haphazard attempts to contact journalists within the span of a day or two, seemed highly frustrated when she didn't get a response right away, and declared the matter impossible and gave up.
RogueIMP · 9 years ago
Well spoken, and spot on!
794CD01 · 9 years ago
>Snowden released a large volume of information to well qualified journalists who very carefully combed through the data to find the things most relevant and important for the American public to know. Information that was legitimately classified and had no whistleblowing value simply wasn't released.
This is a poor defense of Snowden's actions.
If it was given to a journalist who wasn't authorized to have that information, it was "released" in the only sense that is legally relevant, even if the general public doesn't have that information. Imagine saying what you just did, but replacing "journalist" with "KGB agent".
hendersoon · 9 years ago
It's also untrue. Snowden leaked huge masses of data to those journalists. He didn't pick and choose what to give them beyond the most cursory of glances.
The second half of your post seems to be arguing about the word "release" versus "leak". The former is a superset of the latter, both are accurate. Certainly nobody's saying what he did was legal.
anon363764 · 9 years ago
It's morally-consent now to offer Snowden an immunity deal in exchange for inventorying what was taken. Without meaningful whistleblower protections, the deep state remains deeply corrupted.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
I completely agree, but Snowden won't get a pardon for one simple reason-- it would look weak to do so.
Commuting Manning's sentence is magnaminous. She endured 7 years of torture in solitary confinement, tried to suicide several times, and plead guilty in a court of law.
Snowden GOT AWAY. And he went to Russia, where Putin granted asylum as a giant "screw you" to the US.
So yes-- we do have a moral imperative to pardon Snowden, just as much as Manning. But we won't do it.
panarky · 9 years ago
Too much talk about motivations and conscience. Great evils are perpetrated through good intentions and lofty ideals.
But it's clear to me that actions of both Snowden and Manning were moral but illegal.
Regardless of motivation, they both exposed serious crimes. We are all better off because of the risks they took, and there was very little damage to offset the obvious benefits.
The moral yet illegal is exactly what commutation is for. Kudos to Obama for exposing himself to vicious criticism to do the right thing.
grandalf · 9 years ago
None of this matters. What matters is the crimes committed by US officials when they illegally classified much of the information in the first place.
Of course Manning (or anyone who leaks) is likely to be an imperfect messenger. It's silly to focus on those details when there is a much bigger issue at stake.
FWIW I wish all of the Snowden data would have been given to Wikileaks. I have great respect for Glenn Greenwald, but the government has utterly failed to respond to the leaks in an appropriate way, which suggests a great lack of respect for the rule of law and the American people.
Instead, they pretended it hadn't happened and that no excesses occurred. I think several top level officials should have been removed and imprisoned and we should have seen footage of all the computers being carted out and put up for sale so that the money stolen to build the apparatus could be reimbursed to taxpayers.
macspoofing · 9 years ago
>Snowden released a large volume of information to well qualified journalists who very carefully combed through the data
Snowden stole a huge amount of highly classified information and gave a tiny amount to journalists to comb through. Now we only have his word that none of it went to Russian intelligence though all signs point to the contrary.
nfoz · 9 years ago
We have "only the word" of everyone with security clearance that they are not leaking secrets to foreign agents.
You don't have to be physically present in Russia to provide the Russians with intelligence.
I don't know why it makes any sense to assume that Snowden is leaking any more than what he gave to the journalists. His entire mission was out of loyalty to the American public, he did not intend to end up in Russia, and he wants to return to the US. America is keeping him out because they will not guarantee him a trial that meets his criteria of fairness/openness.
macspoofing · 9 years ago
>We have "only the word" of everyone with security clearance that they are not leaking secrets to foreign agents.
Don't be dense. Those other agents didn't make off with 1.7 million highly classified files, flee to China and then arrange a defection to Russia with Russian officials.
>I don't know why it makes any sense to assume that Snowden is leaking any more than what he gave to the journalists.
Because he has stolen much much more than he gave to the journalists and the stolen data was much more extensive than domestic surveillance programs.
>America is keeping him out because they will not guarantee him a trial that meets his criteria of fairness/openness.
I'm sorry the law doesn't meet his criteria.
Fnoord · 9 years ago
He went to Hong Kong. In parent we can see you conveniently call that China, but that isn't the same.
Besides, we have his word, and two (or three) witnesses who saw him destroy the content of the SD card.
macspoofing · 9 years ago
> In parent we can see you conveniently call that China, but that isn't the same.
Diplomatic relations are handled by China's foreign ministry. There is no way Snowden's status would not be handled by the Chinese government.
Fnoord · 9 years ago
There is still only one reason to say he went to China instead of simply mentioning he went to Hong Kong: to deliberately inaccurately describe and deceive what happened ie. a political reason. Don't resort to such lame rhetoric. It won't fly here.
macspoofing · 9 years ago
Oh brother. Neither Hong Kong, nor China is the principal actor in this story. Their role consist of letting him leave despite a passport revocation and an arrest warrant.
Who is trying to muddle the point with irrelevant detail? It won't fly here!!
//
Also, I'm glad there were witnesses of some SD card being destroyed. Good thing we can trust the word of someone who at that point has already stolen deep operational intelligence in the first place (we're not even talking about information on mass domestic intelligence - just typical intelligence data), that this was the only copy he held or wasn't already compromised. A person who then fled to Russia by way of China. Unbelievable.
Fnoord · 9 years ago
You have no proof for any of your conspiracy claims.
macspoofing · 9 years ago
Which part? That he stole a massive amount of Intelligence .. not just pertaining to any domestic surveillance program, but deep organizational and operational intelligence? That he defected to Russia? That he met Russian officials in Honk Kong before leaving? That his passport was revoked and arrest warrant was issued before he left Hong Kong, completly invalidating his claim that he ended up in Russia by happenstance? That his defection was sanctioned by Putin and orchestrated by WikiLeaks, both actors now embroiled in an attempt to corrupt American elections?? Those publicaly acknowledged'conspiracy' claims?
Or is it that I just refuse to take his unsubstantiated claims at face value, and that makes me a conspiracy nut?
The guy is the definition of a traitor to his country.
willstrafach · 9 years ago
> Information that was legitimately classified and had no whistleblowing value simply wasn't released.
This is not true. Aside from the domestic surveillance disclosures which lead to reform in that area, most of the Snowden leaks do not appear to have any sort of whistleblowing value.
Recent example of info release with no whistleblowing value: https://theintercept.com/2016/12/29/top-secret-snowden-docum...
mcv · 9 years ago
I agree that Snowden did it about as well as you could possibly hope for a whistleblower exposing classified information. Manning meant well, but was naive and sloppy. Assange started out with good ideas, but seems to have gone mad with power after the Manning leaks. Still, some of the stuff that Manning and Assange leaked, did need to be exposed. It should have been handled more responsibly, but it still needed to be done.
davidw · 9 years ago
Manning dumped a whole slew of stuff without any checking or vetting or anything else. Some of the stuff I saw in relationship to Italy, for instance, was just diplomatic personnel airing "what they really thought" about Silvio Berlusconi. These comments are the kind of thing that didn't do anyone any good to have dumped in public.
gozur88 · 9 years ago
That was quite harmful. Nobody is going to talk to you in confidence if what they say, attributed, is going to get dumped on the internet.
kafkaesq · 9 years ago
Then maybe you shouldn't (repeatedly, incessantly, decade after decade) engage so shamelessly with forces of corruption and darkness such it that inspires people to take great personal risk to expose that information.
gozur88 · 9 years ago
This has nothing to do with corruption. People talk even without getting paid. Not everyone realizes what they're saying is important or will become important in the future. Most of the time it's just background information.
Also, there's not necessarily an element of "great personal risk". It may just be social or embarrassment or minor damage to a career. If some flunky at a Peruvian consulate has a bit too much to drink and says his boss is an asshole, it gets written down and goes into a file somewhere. When people see that on the internet they think "Man, I really need to watch what I say to the Americans."
kafkaesq · 9 years ago
"Man, I really need to watch what I say to the Americans."
Given the degree of subterfuge the US has facilitated in many of these countries, over the years -- most of these folks already knew that.
gozur88 · 9 years ago
Everybody knows what you say to a diplomat from any country is going to get written down. But there's always been a tacit agreement that not everything gets shared with the world.
And I think you're mostly jumping at shadows here. Diplomacy is a lot less interesting and less nefarious than you seem to believe.
kafkaesq · 9 years ago
Diplomacy is a lot less interesting and less nefarious than you seem to believe.
About 95% of it, yes. But if the other 5% were so profoundly uninteresting then people wouldn't be talking about how "embarrassing" and "damaging" it was to have it released.
gozur88 · 9 years ago
This is a business about people. You can have information that's not "embarrassing" or "damaging" to the US that's both embarrassing and damaging to individuals in other countries.
Again, there's a practical side here. As I asked in another post, just how much would you share with a friend or family member that was going to immediately run to publish what you said in a Facebook post? Because that's essentially what Manning did.
kafkaesq · 9 years ago
Because that's essentially what Manning did.
No, that's not what she did. She gave the archive to a third party (Assange) who turned out to be unreliable. But that's not "the same" -- or even "essentially" the same -- as just outright posting it on Facebook.
Can we just end the discussion there, please? I'm not saying this issue is cut-and-dried, or that there's no validity in your arguments. But if we keep going back and forth about the basic event chronology, then there's really not much a of a point.
gozur88 · 9 years ago
>No, that's not what she did. She gave the archive to a third party (Assange) who turned out to be unreliable. But that's not "the same" -- or even "essentially" the same -- as just outright posting it on Facebook.
Yes it is. Once it's there on the internet, people are linking to it, and it's a topic of discussion, anything that gets you into any kind of trouble is out there for people to see.
>Can we just end the discussion there, please? I'm not saying this issue is cut-and-dried, or that there's no validity in your arguments. But if we keep going back and forth about the basic event chronology, then there's really not much a of a point.
If you're really intent on ending a conversation, try not attempting to slip in the last word.
kafkaesq · 9 years ago
If you're really intent on ending a conversation, try not attempting to slip in the last word.
Sounds eminently reasonable. It's all yours, then.
davidw · 9 years ago
Diplomats need to engage with other countries, no matter how they're run. They also need to be able to talk clearly with one another about what they think things are like without it getting dumped all over the internet.
kafkaesq · 9 years ago
Others would say -- and I would say also -- that in general, the public has benefited greatly from the disclosures in the more pertinent cable leaks.
The thing to keep in mind, though, is that Manning didn't simply dump these to "the public"; she gave them to Assange and his people, who (after some falling out with each other, and a lapse in some basic security practices) managed to leak the passphrase to one of their private keys.
Which isn't to say she's not responsible for the consequences of her actions; in any case, she's already very much paid the price for the decision she made. But still, it was not her intent that the cables be simply "dumped in public".
davidw · 9 years ago
I'm not upset about the commutation of the sentence, but I do think that some punishment was just. I'm not enough of a legal scholar to argue how much might be appropriate, and I think we can all be pretty sure that she's not going to be in a position to dump that kind of data again, so there's not a risk of recidivism.
peteretep · 9 years ago
> the public has benefited greatly
> from the disclosures in the more
> pertinent cable leaks
Examples?kafkaesq · 9 years ago
All kinds of stuff. Disclosure about what the U.S. diplomatic staff knew about corruption and torture in various countries -- and what they really thought about the ruling elites of these places, despite public statements to the contrary; attempts by companies such as Chevron, Lockheed-Martin, and Coca-Cola sought influence in certain countries; how the U.S. arranged to spy on UN officials, etc.
Here's one of my personal favorites (summarized by Reuters):
"You know the movie 'The Godfather'? We've been living it for the last few months," a businessman involved in the dispute was quoted in the cable as telling an official from the U.S. diplomatic mission in Tripoli.
The cable, which was made available to Reuters by a third party, centers on a bottling plant in Tripoli that was shut down for three months. It had been seized by troops loyal to Mutassim Gaddafi, a son of Muammar, who at the time was feuding with one of his brothers, Mohammed. (Another State Department cable suggests a third Gaddafi son, Saadi -- better known as the family's professional soccer player -- may also have been involved in the squabble, though no details of his role are given.)
Eventually, the American diplomatic mission in Tripoli, known then as the U.S. Liaison Office, sent a firm protest to the Libyan government. The document states that around the same time, Mohammed Gaddafi, possibly under pressure from his sister Aisha, a family peacemaker, apparently agreed that shares owned by the Libyan Olympic Committee, which he led, would be sold to a third party.
Shortly afterward, the cable says, Mutassim's men left the Coke plant, ending the family standoff, but not before employees of the plant received threats of bodily harm and a Gaddafi cousin was stuffed in the trunk of a car.
Really, it shouldn't be hard to satisfy your own curiosity on this topic. Unless you think we're better off not knowing about this stuff, that is.
peteretep · 9 years ago
How has the public benefitted from any of that? It sounds like your morbid curiosity has been satisfied, but who didn't know Libya under Gaddafi was a cesspit?
> Unless you think we're better off
> not knowing about this stuff, that is.
Who didn't already know all of that in broad strokes?kafkaesq · 9 years ago
Who didn't already know all of that in broad strokes?
I guess that argument could be applied to high crimes and corruption of all sorts, just about anywhere: "We already know about that in broad strokes. What good does it do to air all that dirty laundry before the general public?"
peteretep · 9 years ago
> high crimes
Which these weren't. There's about as much public benefit in knowing how exactly Gaddafi was corrupt as there is in known just how many women Tom Cruise has slept with. cf: Public Interestkafkaesq · 9 years ago
There's about as much public benefit in knowing how exactly Gaddafi was corrupt as there is in known just how many women Tom Cruise has slept with.
This is, quite frankly, a bizarre equivalence to make.
stale2002 · 9 years ago
I am sure that the people that were getting murdered by Gaddafi disagree.
crispyambulance · 9 years ago
Manning certainly has already paid a harsh price for her decisions. I think reasonable people would say that it was "enough" at this point. What good does it do to keep Manning in prison for the full 35 years?
As for outing what people "really think" of Berlusconi... I suspect that no one was surprised (including the clown himself, Silvio).
rayiner · 9 years ago
I think it was great that those cables leaked. They exposed "statecraft" as the empty posturing and dick waving it often is.
3legcat · 9 years ago
"Chelsea Manning acted on her conscience"
Acting on her conscience does not make what she did the right thing to do.
For example, the 2 men behind the boston marathon bombing, did what they did based on their conscience. Did that make what they did right?
_delirium · 9 years ago
Obama doesn't seem to completely disagree, since he didn't pardon her. He instead commuted the sentence from 35 years to 7 years' imprisonment. In my personal opinion that's still too long for the crime, but it's at least less completely insane than 35 years.
kzrdude · 9 years ago
The military justice has a possibility for parole release before the term, unlike U.S. federal civil justice. So there was always the possibility of a such release.
https://www.emptywheel.net/2013/08/21/bradley-mannings-sente...
_delirium · 9 years ago
Thanks, I didn't realize the military had retained parole after the rest of the federal government abolished it. If I'm reading the link correctly, 10 years would have been the minimum time served in this case. If it were likely that parole would be granted at the earliest point of eligibility (would it be? I have no idea), this commutation then amounts to knocking 3 years off the minimum sentence. Which is not nothing, but less dramatic than the headline 28 years.
Shivetya · 9 years ago
he did pardon Marine General James Cartwright who released details about the cyber attacks on Iran. That one is was a surprise
greedo · 9 years ago
He didn't release details. He lied to investigators to deflect their attention from the real leaker. Sort of like how Martha Stewart was convicted of making false statements to Federal agents.
_delirium · 9 years ago
Is that the conventional wisdom? I thought the consensus was that he probably was the source for David Sanger's book, but that the federal government didn't want the exposure of litigating the case, so it was resolved in the end by him agreeing to plead guilty to a lesser offense of, roughly, "lying under oath about not being the leaker", without being actually charged with the leak itself.
dnautics · 9 years ago
also being tortured in custody and put into solitary is much for the crime. I don't understand why Obama had to wait so long (couldn't he have, at least done it two or three months ago?) and why he's letting Chelsea stay in the pen till summer? Why not let her out more or less now?
maxander · 9 years ago
Likely in the hopes that the story won't be as big a deal when she's actually released, and won't receive as much attention from potentially dangerous people.
stvswn · 9 years ago
Because the date of Manning's release (May 17th) is international LGBT day
croon · 9 years ago
I would say that makes it worse. Don't you risk making it a token/pandering act instead of doing what is (arguably) the right thing to do?
lione · 9 years ago
Or, as they say in the article, that's 4 months from now, a somewhat reasonable time (considering it could have been 28 years and 4 months) to finish everything up, get her affairs on the outside settled, and all the bureaucracy done.
iainmerrick · 9 years ago
But why does she have to remain in prison until then? Can't they at least put her in the equivalent of "gardening leave"?
dnautics · 9 years ago
the commutation could have been done 2 months ago to allow for reasonable time. Also, it's not like the president doesn't have the resources or authority to accelerate it. Pardon my cynicism, but (not that I have any sympathy for the incoming president) it seems more like a political ploy to put the incoming president in a conflict where the president is tempted to do something deeply unethical to be politically consistent.
BHSPitMonkey · 9 years ago
It's a bit of a stretch to assume the timing of this massive batch of pardons and commutes was predicated on making her release (which includes a mandatory grace period) line up with that holiday.
mrb · 9 years ago
"How could they not punish Manning?"
But she was punished. With 7 years that she already spent in jail. I don't think that reducing her sentence from 35 years to 7 years "encourage others to leak".
clashmoore · 9 years ago
The book, "The Spy Who Couldn't Spell: A Dyslexic Traitor, an Unbreakable Code, and the FBI's Hunt for America's Stolen Secrets" by Yudhijit Bhattacharjee tells the story of an American intelligence worker who tried to pass off information to other governments just prior to Sept. 11th.
His motivation was money (selling his secrets for millions of dollars) and when he was caught, he was hoping to have his sentence reduced to 8 years so he may be with his family.
I think it would be encouraging to others to leak if the risk of making millions for their families to getting caught still allows them to live life if the punishment is anything less than life.
rosser · 9 years ago
Different circumstances. Spying for money should be treated radically differently than spying for conscience.
peteretep · 9 years ago
Wasn't she spying mostly out of pique?
rosser · 9 years ago
I don't know about "mostly", but I definitely agree that her motives weren't entirely clean.
This is why I'm very much in the "Pardon Snowden, Commute Manning" camp.
ishields · 9 years ago
> It would do a lot to encourage others to indiscriminately leak classified info
A one-time presidential commute or pardon would do no such thing. Saying that "this specific case has been looked at and deemed to be okay" doesn't automatically equate to "everyone can do this and they won't get in trouble." There's a huge difference between whistleblowing and treason
Natsu · 9 years ago
That's understandable, but Manning's sentence has been unusually cruel in its execution, and unjust when compared to other people who did without being punished at all.
See, e.g. the conduct that Colin Powell described in this email:
https://wikileaks.org/clinton-emails/emailid/30324
[EDIT: click to view the PDF to find the actual content.]
the_duke · 9 years ago
Is there a list of emails that contain actual unfavorable/damning information?
Natsu · 9 years ago
Yes, although IMHO it's not a very good one. Some of these should be taken with salt -
sjy · 9 years ago
For example, #6 claims that 'Hillary's campaign' wants an 'unaware and compliant citizenry,' on the basis of an unsolicited email to Podesta using that phrase to describe Trump's campaign strategy!
Natsu · 9 years ago
Assuming you're talking about this email -
https://wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/3599
It's oversold, yes, but as far as I can tell, it's this Bill Ivey (NEA chairman under Clinton, Obama transition team member) and not some random spammer -
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bill_Ivey
Other correspondence can be found here -
https://search.wikileaks.org/?q=bi%40globalculturalstrategie...
Natsu · 9 years ago
I should also mention that it's fairly incomplete. E.G. no mention of this one that Wikileaks tweeted earlier regarding Taiwan -
https://wikileaks.org/clinton-emails/emailid/23730#efmAEGAEh...
sjy · 9 years ago
Are you saying that Colin Powell should have been imprisoned for using a PDA against the wishes of the NSA/CIA?
Natsu · 9 years ago
I'm saying that all people should get equal justice under law.
rand77763 · 9 years ago
The POV of the government should be nothing more than the POV of the people.
cderwin · 9 years ago
There is no POV of "the people". A bunch of individuals comprise the people, and some of those individuals also comprise the government. But "the people" as a group do not have a POV.
rtkwe · 9 years ago
That's a shay position given how wrong a majority of the country has been at various times in history. Forced school desegregation was wildly unpopular in a lot of the country (even the north) but it was the right thing to do, some issues shouldn't be left to the whims of a populace. It also treats the view of the people as a singular entity when it's vastly fractured and multifaceted.
tropo · 9 years ago
Forced school desegregation is not active for most kids. Many people buy into expensive school districts. Cupertino, Mountain View, Palo Alto, and other fine cities are not exactly desegregated. Even in more mixed areas, the school zones are seldom mixed. Then, for those without the money to isolate themselves by zip code, there is homeschooling. Kids do not get bused from one homeschooling family to another.
Legion · 9 years ago
hnbro · 9 years ago
acalderaro · 9 years ago
Yea, from the POV of the government having the public realize all the illegal, unethical and irresponsible things you've been doing with their tax dollars would be absolutely terrible. Someone may end up getting jail time - or even worse - lose their reelection!
/s
Anyone who is able to condemn Manning would also condemn the soldiers of Hitler's army who chose to disobey orders to kill Jews because it would have been against the law.
Just because something is illegal doesn't mean it's wrong. And if our government didn't engage in illegal activity (like torture, political uprisings, wire tapping) then perhaps people like Manning wouldn't have to leak information that could compromise a few undercover agents.
In this case, the benefits far outweigh the costs. Find me a politician or soldier who got jail time for committing acts of torture in Baghdad and then we can talk about penalizing Manning.
thrill · 9 years ago
You sure jumped to Nazi comparisons rather quickly.
Zooper · 9 years ago
Rather than being an example of Godwin's law, though, this is a historically analogous comparison of US war crimes justifications in Iraq to the Nuremberg defense and doesn't suggest impending ethnic genocide where there is none.
acalderaro · 9 years ago
Because the comparisons are blatantly obvious.
golergka · 9 years ago
Is there a single thing in those files to make Nazi comparison justifiable?
acalderaro · 9 years ago
Nazis tortured and massacred civilians in eastern Europe. US Soldiers did so in Iraq. Did you even bother to read the reports?
pvg · 9 years ago
There really wasn't much in the way of corruption and wrongdoing in the diplomatic cables. If anything they showed that the mundane private details of US diplomacy match US public diplomatic stances quite closely.
baddox · 9 years ago
According to this article, the prosecution failed to provide evidence that anyone was killed due to the leaks. I don't know if anyone was harmed, but it really doesn't seem like it.
tropo · 9 years ago
Muammar Gaddafi, obviously.
There are/were several other leaders nearby who also suffered.
Along with them, the resulting violent conflict killed plenty more.
flukus · 9 years ago
Why not just blame the butterfly for flapping it's wings?
adrienne · 9 years ago
Manning is a woman; is there some reason you're calling her a "they"?
rabidrat · 9 years ago
"He" is the pronoun that was used in their past, "she" is the pronoun for the present. When we're talking about the past+present for this person, I think "they" is not unreasonable. At least, it's more reasonable than trying to call someone out for their pronoun usage when the discussion is about a much more serious topic.
adrienne · 9 years ago
No, the correct way to do this is to use the individual's pronouns. Please note that the AP and the NYT have basically adopted the GLAAD style guide on this issue: http://www.glaad.org/reference/transgender
The NYT correctly stated in the parent article, "Ms. Manning was still known as Bradley Manning when she deployed with her unit to Iraq in late 2009." See how that works? She was always a she, even though she was presenting as a man at the time.
panic · 9 years ago
Really, it's ok, you can call her "she"! It's not going to hurt you, and it'll help trans people everywhere feel a little less shitty reading this website.
hnbro · 9 years ago
does "they" imply a gender?
KirinDave · 9 years ago
It can imply a number of things, from agender people to people like me who can't really be bothered to explain it.
Trans binary people enforce their gender identity quite strongly because they get so much "pushback" (a polite way of saying harassment and threats) from people. In this case "they" is tapping into that.
If you think this is complicated, try calling a baptist a catholic and see what happens.
dforrestwilson1 · 9 years ago
We live within a rules-based system. For Manning the rule was "We'll give you this security clearance, here are 100 classes about not spilling the things you know to anyone else."
I too am troubled by the decision, but it does seem a bit out of whack with the total lack of punishment for the higher echelons of government. Lately it seems like the rules-based system we have been living under is cracking.
JoeAltmaier · 9 years ago
Years in solitary confinement isn't "total lack of punishment". And an intelligence contractor flunky isn't "higher echelons"
dforrestwilson1 · 9 years ago
I was referring to Powell and HRC. What were you referring to?
beedogs · 9 years ago
It's okay to call her "she", you know. "They" is a little... odd, when referring to a person.
dcposch · 9 years ago
It's becoming increasingly common.
Personally I think esoteric pronouns like "ve" are a silly idea that won't catch on, but I like the idea of using "they" as a gender neutral way to refer to one or more people.
It's a straightforward expansion of the current usage: as a gender neutral way to refer to two or more people.
bluehex · 9 years ago
My problem with "they" is that it's overloading the plural pronoun and using it like a singular. This can cause confusion, for example, it makes the comment we're discussing a bit hard to read when in one sentence "they" means Manning and in the next sentence "they" means the government.
stonogo · 9 years ago
You mean they're making the third person work more like the second person? However shall we survive the chaos
cygx · 9 years ago
Singular they goes back centuries[1].
hnbro · 9 years ago
i think it's only odd to some because of prescriptive "style guide" insistence over the years. it makes a great deal of sense.
kriro · 9 years ago
Regarding the harm it did to US relations with other countries...I think long term it would be more positive for relations with all countries if there's decent treatment of whistle blowers. Sure short term it sucks to have info along the lines of "we did X to harm your country" leaked but let's face it most sane governments assume that the U.S. is doing some very shady things and has a huge budget to execute that fairly "well". At the end of the day I'd much rather have a U.S. doing shady things and some people shining a light on it every now and then than just the U.S. doing shady things.
EdHominem · 9 years ago
> Manning did commit a crime.
Not actually. Manning was required by law to refuse and report illegal orders. And not just make a show of reporting it and then back to business as usual.
> didn't it also do things like give away the positions of some undercover agents?
No, but that'd be our fault anyways, for mixing legal and illegal.
> And harm US diplomatic relations with other countries?
The truth didn't harm relations, doing the things that the allies found out about in the first place was the problem.
> Look at it from the POV of the government: How could they not punish Manning?
Um, admitting fault and correcting it. But yeah, we know that'd never happen so what could they do but shoot the messenger?
> It would do a lot to encourage others to indiscriminately leak classified info.
Doubtful. The motivator in Manning's case wasn't the ease or difficulty of leaking, but the crimes that needed exposing.
bryanrasmussen · 9 years ago
yeah, maybe, but I guess I would also say that maybe he did the decent thing when he judged it would no longer bear a political cost to do so - because I bet being a politician means you have to take those political costs into consideration. (certain exceptions do spring to mind)
hackuser · 9 years ago
> Obama is trying to leave a positive view of the Democratic legacy with this lasting memory. It helps people forget
How do you know what Obama's motive is? Were you at the meetings? Did you read the memos? Do you have a brain-to-brain interface or have you hacked his Blackberry?
Should he do nothing good or positive, so that you don't suspect him of manipulating people?
hawkice · 9 years ago
> Should he do nothing good or positive, so that you don't suspect him of manipulating people?
I mean, the crime, conviction, sentencing, and multiple suicide attempts all happened while Obama had the power to commute the sentence. If there was a principle at play here, if Obama thought it was a moral good to have this person avoid a prison sentence, I'm having a hard time imagining what the roadblock was. Was it that the massive leak and subsequent prosecution didn't get enough media coverage, so he was unaware of the situation? No, that doesn't sound right, it was widely known at every stage in the process.
If commuting someone sends a message, the delay sends a message too. Perhaps he's just trying to do the right thing when the consequences won't hurt him. Perhaps it's all for show. But I think it's fair to conclusively rule out the theory about this decision being made in order to maximize the welfare of Manning. Something else was in the calculus here.
the_duke · 9 years ago
If he did it during the campaining, which was basically the last 18 months, the Republicans would have been all over it.
Not that I'm praising him, he's been terrible wrt surveilance and transparency.
kbenson · 9 years ago
> if Obama thought it was a moral good to have this person avoid a prison sentence
What if he thought it was good to avoid too long of a sentence? One possible interpretation is that he wanted punishment because it was against the law and as a deterrence, but didn't want to be too harsh. Sentencing isn't within his control, but commuting a sentence is.
> If commuting someone sends a message, the delay sends a message too.
Sure, everything sends a message, but not every message is intentional. It's undisputable that these actions send messages, but impossible to know for sure what the reasoning was and what messages were intentional and what were byproducts. The traditional time for a president to commute and pardon is at the end of their presidency, so reading a purposeful message into the delay may or may not be useful.
MrMember · 9 years ago
Obama has done very little (anything?) to support whistleblowers or an open and transparent government in the eight years he has been President. It's hard not to be skeptical of such an uncharacteristic move days before he's set to leave office.
jmcdiesel · 9 years ago
Its not at all hard...
This is the time for doing these things... things like this that have the potential to upset a lot of people you rely on... but he wont be relying on them anytime soon... thats kinda where the "tradition" of pardons, etc at the last few days of term comes from.. there is next to no backlash for the president if hes only in office for a few more days
cm2187 · 9 years ago
Whistle blowing requires the knowledge of wrong doing, and exposing these wrong doings.
As far as I am aware that guy leaked the data in bulk without looking at it, and without any knowledge of the US diplomacy, and the leaks didn't expose any major wrongdoing. Only some gory videos, that don't really teach us anything (everyone knows bombs make "collateral damages", the US army even maintains statistics on them). And everything I read from people who reviewed the diplomatic cables suggest that US diplomats are doing rather well their jobs.
I am a libertarian, pro-pardoning Snowden, who did expose deliberately major wrong doings. But I am struggling to call Manning a whistleblower.
TillE · 9 years ago
> Only some gory videos, that don't really teach us anything (everyone knows bombs make "collateral damages"
So you've never actually watched (or read about) the Collateral Murder video, huh? It's a helicopter crew killing people with guns, not bombs. And they kill exactly who they intend to.
Maybe don't form strong opinions when you don't have the slightest clue what the facts are.
mason240 · 9 years ago
Manning had no knowledge of the video. It happened to be in the blind data dump.
hendersoon · 9 years ago
That is not true, and is easily verifiable by reading Chelsea's chat logs with Adrian Lamo.
cm2187 · 9 years ago
As far as I know they have mistaken a TV crew for some armed people. Big deal. This sort of fuckups happen all the time in any war. That's called "collateral damage". If you don't want any you can't shoot on people from a helicopter 300m away from your target, through a low res B&W video. In fact there are very few things any army could do if we wanted to have zero collateral damage. When congress authorizes a war, the reality is that they authorize the fact that these things may happen.
I'm not pro-Irak war, quite the contrary. But the fact that civilians have been killed isn't exactly a hidden secret that was uncovered by the leaks
> Maybe don't form strong opinions when you don't have the slightest clue what the facts are.
This sort of insults has nothing to do on HN
HerraBRE · 9 years ago
The "collateral murder" video, which was based on Manning's leaks, is really quite chilling and definitely shows wrong doings that were then covered up by the government. There was more, but this was the most visual/memorable.
I suggest you turn your scepticism to 11 and go watch it, see if you still feel the same way. https://collateralmurder.wikileaks.org/
(warning: if watching civilians, journalists and children being killed in cold blood bothers you, maybe don't go watch it, just read about it instead)
pvg · 9 years ago
The incident had been reported and covered by the press, there was no 'government cover up'. The new bit was the video itself.
HerraBRE · 9 years ago
Government stonewalling then, the government wasn't exactly forthcoming. Reuters had been fighting for information for quite some time.
manarth · 9 years ago
The new bit was the video itself.
Saying "X happened", and offering "Here is video that demonstrates X happened" are very different things. A video of an event can be of such overwhelming significance that its importance is impossible to calculate.pvg · 9 years ago
Not the case for this incident. You don't have to speculate, you can just read the wikipedia page. For instance, a reporter for the Washington Post was able to reconstruct the incident and write a book about it without seeing the video. 'Collateral murder' is much more notable for the Wikileaks editorializing than for its actual news value.
manarth · 9 years ago
You don't have to speculate, you can just read the wikipedia page.
Which page are you referring to? Could you please provide a link? a reporter for the Washington Post was able to reconstruct the
incident and write a book about it without seeing the video.
Is that not worrying though: a journalist writing an article, whilst ignoring a reputable source? If there is a verifiable video, shouldn't the journalist view the video (and decide whether it's verifiable or not), and include that in the article? To deliberately ignore a significant piece of evidence is a significant editorial decision.pvg · 9 years ago
Is that not worrying though: a journalist writing an article, whilst ignoring a reputable source?
No it isn't because that's not what happened. As to the page, the page about the incident. I'm starting to think you don't really know much about the details and want to debate this from first principles. That's not going to be very fruitful.
manarth · 9 years ago
As to the page, the page about the incident.
For my benefit, and the benefit of everyone reading this thread, hoping to gain a greater understanding of the issues, could you please provide the specific URL, rather than alluding elliptically to "the incident"?pvg · 9 years ago
You want to argue with me about something you're apparently unfamiliar with and also want me to direct you to basic information about it you can trivially look up yourself? Please, for your benefit and for the benefit of basic politeness, do a bit of the legwork.
manarth · 9 years ago
I'm still unclear about which particular Wikipedia page you would like to direct me to.
You've posted:
The incident had been reported and covered by the press, there was
no 'government cover up'. The new bit was the video itself.
You've then stated: you can just read the wikipedia page
You've gone on to say: As to the page, the page about the incident.
You've then stated: You want me to direct you to basic information…you can trivially look up yourself
At no point have you given any source: neither primary, secondary, or other. It is hard to understand which material you are referring to, when you repeatedly will not source the material which you referring to. Your posts do not seem to contain any source material, so you seem to rely on third-party sources, but so far, you haven't identified any of those sources.It would be great for everyone reading this thread, to understand the material on which you're basing these claims.
pvg · 9 years ago
You should read the beginning of the thread. Or type 'collateral murder incident' into google. That's all that it would have taken instead of 19 different ways of telling me how you don't know anything about this but I should sort you out. Let's call it a day.
manarth · 9 years ago
You should read the beginning of the thread.
Or type 'collateral murder incident' into google.
The beginning of the thread references https://collateralmurder.wikileaks.org/ which is a wiki leaks URL, rather than a wiki pedia URL, as you suggested when you said "you can just read the wikipedia page".Googling "collateral murder incident" does give a number of results, which does include a Wikipedia page, but it's not one that has been referenced in this discussion.
It's important for honest, rational discussion, to cite sources - especially those sources you depend upon. Unless you specifically state your sources, it's hard to understand the argument you're presenting, and the basis for your argument. Without a citation, it's essentially arguing that the Emperor's new clothes really are golden, and we have to believe that, because they really are golden.
albedoa · 9 years ago
I typed "collateral murder incident" into google and it returned the exact Wikipedia page that pvg told you it would return.
Further, when I type "Collateral Murder" into the Wikipedia search, it brings me directly to the page about the airstrike that pvg has repeatedly referenced, anchored at the section about the video.
Just what are you trying to pull here?
which does include a Wikipedia page, but it's not one
that has been referenced in this discussion.
It has been referenced multiple times in this thread by pvg. For someone who purportedly puts so much stock in honesty, this is incredibly dishonest of you.manarth · 9 years ago
it returned the exact Wikipedia page that pvg told you it would return
Which particular wikipedia page is being so thoroughly referenced in this thread? Which particular post in this thread provides a URL?Perhaps you could post the URL of that Wikipedia page?
Is it so terribly hard to copy and paste the URL of the page which is being cited?
After all, you have referred to this specific Wikipedia page in your comment, but you have still not provided the URL.
albedoa · 9 years ago
There has to be something seriously wrong with you to want to keep up this charade for so long. At best, you are pathologically dishonest.
brainfire · 9 years ago
It's interesting that your example is someone working for the Washington Post- that's enough for certain people to dismiss it out of hand as "fake news."
tropo · 9 years ago
So, it's war. And??? The video:
We see a guy carrying what looks like a rocket launcher. (it's a really really long telephoto lens) He is sneaking around with the enemy (sort of an embedded journalist) and peaking out from around corners, appearing to point a rocket launcher at the US military. Unsurprisingly, he gets blown to bits.
We see an enemy hop over a wall while getting shot at. A minivan stops to get him. Note that it was common for the enemy to transport people and weapons in similar vehicles. People who are not involved in the conflict would be nuts to be driving around in the battlefield. The minivan is thus also shot up. It happens to contain kids... so some child abuser brought kids to a battlefield, WTF.
Note that the unedited (long) version of the video shows some of the "victims" carrying weapons. This wasn't an intentional slaughter of innocents, even if a few innocents did stupidly wander into a battlefield and get killed.
If you call this "murder", you might as well call all war murder. That's a very political position to be taking. War sucks; this shouldn't be news to anybody.
golergka · 9 years ago
And right after watching this video, I understood that Manning really deserved the sentence.
This is war. The video clearly shows that soldiers made a decision made on an honest, although tragic, mistake. They have to make this kind of decisions all the time - and I fail to see how anyone can say, from information that was available to them, that the decision was in any way wrong.
The fact that this story had to be covered up says more about idiocy of public and the media that would've (and did) make a baseless witchhunt. I finally 'got it' after watching "Eye in the sky" (spoilers!): if hollywood screenwriters and moviegoers really think that killing one innocent girl to prevent two suicide bombings is some kind of a complicated moral dilemma that's worth more than three seconds of deliberating, then may be this kind of public really shouldn't be trusted with classified information.
enraged_camel · 9 years ago
>>This is war. The video clearly shows that soldiers made a decision made on an honest, although tragic, mistake.
Um, they fired on a van despite realizing that it had come to pick up the wounded. Geneva Conventions clearly state that hospitals, both fixed and mobile, ambulances, hospital ships, medical aircraft, and medical personnel are not to be fired upon.
https://youtu.be/5rXPrfnU3G0?t=9m10s
(You'll also note the trigger-happy attitude of the gunner. He kept begging for permission to engage, and at one point got pretty frustrated that he was having to wait. Like the OP said: chilling.)
golergka · 9 years ago
> hospitals, both fixed and mobile, ambulances, hospital ships, medical aircraft, and medical personnel are not to be fired upon
This van didn't have any markings to indicate that it was a dedicated medical unit. What about enemy combatants that are performing medical tasks at the moment? As far as I understand, they're fair game.
> (You'll also note the trigger-happy attitude of the gunner. He kept begging for permission to engage, and at one point got pretty frustrated that he was having to wait. Like the OP said: chilling.)
He was looking at people, that (in his view, conceived by a completely honest mistake) were there to kill his comrades in arms. His attitude, being eager to kill them, is completely reasonable — war is a constant kill or be killed situation, and allowing your enemy to evacuate the wounded combatants mean that they will later come back and kill you or your comrades in arms.
Once again, your reaction confirms my main point: the general public doesn't bother to think the situation through and judges actions made in war without the necessary context. Which just confirms that this kind of transparency is just as good as determining whether or not climate change is real (or if vaccination is harmful) through general election without any minimal education requirements.
adrienne · 9 years ago
Chelsea Manning is a woman; please do not misgender her by referring to her as "that guy".
cowardlydragon · 9 years ago
7 years isolation, not just 7 years
copperx · 9 years ago
Woah, still enough to make anyone go insane.
bjourne · 9 years ago
> I oppose state secrets and the Hillary e-mails are actually very chilling when you start reading through them.
Weren't they from the DNC leak? The DNC is not affiliated with the US state. I read some of the mails, and I found nothing chilling so I'm curious to know what chilling mails you found.
e40 · 9 years ago
I'd like the answer to that, too. From everything I've read, this seems to be FUD.
AwfulCaptain · 9 years ago
I think what's chilling is the inconsistent application of the law regarding sensitive information (for example, emails).
Secretary of State Clinton, who deletes government emails and communicates state secrets through her own private email server, receives no punishment, while people who blow the whistle on questionable government behavior receive maximum punishment.
That lack of consistency in applying the law is what makes it unfair...for everybody.
bjourne · 9 years ago
You're on a different subject. What was chilling according to the parent was the contents of the leaked emails. The private email server controversy had nothing to do with that.
bwooceli · 9 years ago
Not a whistle blower. The cable leaks were just a bulk drop of decades worth of material.
karmacondon · 9 years ago
By definition, a whistle blower must reveal evidence of the commission of a crime. The term does not extend to "actions by the government that I disagree with" or "things that violate my personal interpretations of the Constitution"
If you misuse the term, you make it more difficult for legitimate whistle blowers to get the protection they deserve.
themartorana · 9 years ago
Murder, torture, blanket domestic spying etc., are not (or have not recently been) considered crimes when the federal government is the actor. The line isn't so clear.
grzm · 9 years ago
When they're given those labels, they are. The question is whether the actions are accurately described by those particular words. That's why phrases like "enhanced interrogation techniques" are employed, to make a distinction between that and torture, for example.
(Note, I'm not arguing that I think any particular actions are or are not criminal. I'm too ignorant of the details to meaningfully speak one way or the other.)
serge2k · 9 years ago
> That's why phrases like "enhanced interrogation techniques" are employed, to make a distinction between that and torture, for example.
I'm not sure what you are saying here. Using a euphemism doesn't make torture any better.
grzm · 9 years ago
In the spirit of Pascal, I apologize in advance for not having a more eloquent, concise reply, though on my part its more exhaustion and laziness rather than lack of time.
People have different definitions of what constitutes torture. There is also a legal definition of torture (which may be vague, but will be determined judicially if it comes to that). By definition, torture is against the law. As people have different definitions of what constitutes torture, some acts will meet the legal definition, while others will not even though they meets the definition held by someone else.
I happen to agree with you that "enhanced interrogation techniques" is a euphemism for torture. By defining certain acts as such, it gives proponents of using such acts a legal basis of arguing that they're not torture, whether it's ultimately justified or not.
Does that make sense? I'm not asking whether or not you agree with the distinction (which would be hard to do as I haven't defined which acts fall under either). I'm just asking whether the argument follows, that you understand why the language matters.
A similar distinction is made for killing in war and murder. Some people believe all killing is wrong and murder. That said, there's a legal distinction between the two. Which term is applied is legally important.
NotSammyHagar · 9 years ago
But what we have seen is that the govt violated the rules that were supposed to constrain them, hiding the illegal acts they committed. They fight to avoid having court cases address the true legality.
baddox · 9 years ago
> "things that violate my personal interpretations of the Constitution"
The fact that it's even feasible to release confidential information about government action implies that there is some ability for individuals to interpret the law. Otherwise, if the government does it, you just have to accept it as legal.
manarth · 9 years ago
Slavery and the Holocaust were legal (within the legal context of their respective nations' legislation).
Sometimes even governments' actions are illegal.
baddox · 9 years ago
Yes, sometimes government actions are illegal, but a random individual can't know that unless they A) see a court case actually happen or B) interpret the law themselves and determine that the actions are illegal. Option A doesn't help whistleblowers, since the whole point of whistleblowing is to cause a court case to occur.
manarth · 9 years ago
You're right that individuals do have to interpret the law, and choose their behaviour accordingly. AFAIK, it's only in the last hundred years or so that we've started to recognise human rights having precedence over a single nation's law, which makes it "legal" for individuals to act contrary to their nation's laws.
That recognition does make it easier (than it was) to counter, but there are still challenges, and they're unlikely to disappear soon.
the_duke · 9 years ago
By whose definition?
Since you went there:
Oxford dictionary says: "A person who informs on a person or organization engaged in an illicit activity."
What is illicit? : "Forbidden by law, rules, or custom."
Is what the cables actually revealed customary? Probably.
kbenson · 9 years ago
> By whose definition?
By the definition set forth in the law[1][2], but it's not just crimes. There is a list of specifically acceptably things.
1: https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/STATUTE-103/pdf/STATUTE-103-Pg...
afterburner · 9 years ago
"the Hillary e-mails are actually very chilling when you start reading through them"
What chilled you, specifically?
markdown · 9 years ago
Collusion with the media and a debate moderator should chill anyone. Add to that the fact that the DNC basically anointed her by not giving Sanders a fair shake... democrats were told who to vote for using the media to give them the illusion of free choice.
Put another way, the emails revealed that it's very possibly that Trump will be President because Clinton had corrupted the DNC.
fullshark · 9 years ago
> Collusion with the media and a debate moderator should chill anyone.
That is really the only significant dirt that came from that leak. The Sanders stuff was overblown.
cwkoss · 9 years ago
Have you read the leaks? What parts do you think are overblown?
From what I've read, it appears the DNC directly violated their own bylaws by (strongly) preferring one candidate before the primary. Repeatedly and flagrantly.
If the DNC isn't even accountable to itself, how should American voters feel about them having control over the duopoly of private parties which are allowed to select presidential candidates? At best, their actions were revealed to be grossly unethical. At worst, criminal.
arrosenberg · 9 years ago
How could a private organization violating their charter extend to criminality?
Most of the leaks showing the DNC "favoring" Clinton came after it was clear she was going to win the primary, and most of DNC wanted to focus on the general election. On top of that, individual staffers having a preference for the person they are very close to over the guy who joined the party just to run shouldn't be that surprising, but I haven't seen any evidence that it translated in substantial action to tilt the field in favor of Hillary. I'll concede the debate question issue was a bad look, but again, what advantage was conferred by telling the HRC team that a debate in Flint would feature a question about the Flint Water Crisis?
lern_too_spel · 9 years ago
The debate question was given to the Clinton camp by Brazile when Brazile wasn't working for the DNC. The closer you look at the emails, the more you realize that there's no there there.
fullshark · 9 years ago
The issue is it was clear Clinton was winning before the race was over based on polling, superdelegates, and what states were remaining. The DNC wanted to discuss (privately) how to limit damage to HRC from Sanders attacks before the general.
These sort of private discussion are totally reasonable for an organization like the DNC to have before the primary was 100% over cause they could see the writing on the wall. I didn't read every leak or anything like that but what I did see was mostly of this nature. This of course pissed off Sanders supporters (the point of the leak in the first place) but it really wasn't that bad imo.
The Brazile thing was though and I'm amazed she's not hiding in a cave somewhere in disgrace.
markdown · 9 years ago
> The issue is it was clear Clinton was winning before the race was over based on polling, superdelegates, and what states were remaining.
And the reason for that was because she was heavily pushed as the candidate by CNN, MSNBC, etc while the same media ignored Sanders. That it only became clear later that this media had relations with the Clinton campaign and DNC beyond just the personal biases of pundits is cause for concern IMO.
afterburner · 9 years ago
No way, the media knew the Clintons? I mean she just came out of nowhere!
afterburner · 9 years ago
Yeah, the media really did her a favour by talking about emails all the time. Totally in the tank for her.
3pt14159 · 9 years ago
Yeah, I read them and I came away liking her more.
peteretep · 9 years ago
Irritating that this is getting downvoted. I too felt the same way -- the "revelation" that she's a pragmatist acting in good faith did nothing to make me dislike her.
iopq · 9 years ago
If you hate marijuana, sure
MicroBerto · 9 years ago
Is everyone here forgetting the millions given by foreign nations?? The outright collusion with media? The lack of sensitivity to LGBT rights? The fact that they never discussed how to actually solve the Nation's problems, only worked on crafting a message to the public, and having "public and private" policies? The family connections to Russia that everyone conveniently ignores lately? Or most chilling of all, the cryptic codespeak used in several emails?
mongmong · 9 years ago
All that tells me is she was a politician playing the political game. Or do you think it is mutually exclusive to play politics and caring about doing good things with power? Do you think emails between Sanders campaign staff would not be discussing talking points and tactics if their campaign emails were leaked?
MicroBerto · 9 years ago
I'm upset enough that our politicians take monstrous amounts of money from corporate lobbyists... let alone foreign nations in questionable areas!! That part is unforgivable.
Justify it however you want, there was some very chilling revelations in those emails. I want politicians solving problems, not building press angles.
lawless123 · 9 years ago
>there was some very chilling revelations in those emails.
The most chilling part was that having your pizza restaurant mentioned in the emails can lead to lunatics showing up with guns to threaten your staff.
mongmong · 9 years ago
I keep hearing vague mentions of corruption and chilling revelations from these email leaks, but i have never once been given a link to a particular email thread demonstrating this. Care to share a link?
davexunit · 9 years ago
When the alternative is Hitler, you pick Hillary.
asveikau · 9 years ago
> The family connections to Russia that everyone conveniently ignores lately?
Remind me, which side of that election is now alleged to have been talking to FSB the whole time?
MicroBerto · 9 years ago
First off, arguing "against the other side" has nothing to do with these emails and is offtopic. We're referencing what was discovered in the leaked emails. And inside, you can find documented proof of the Uranium One thing and their concerns over it.
asveikau · 9 years ago
You may consider it a fallacy, but I am making the point that Trump supporters attacking Hillary over Russia policy smells of the old "attack your own weakness" strategy of American politics, often attributed to Karl Rove and the like.
afterburner · 9 years ago
What millions? The same collusion that had all media screaming about emails all the time? The default support for LGBT rights? What family connections to Russia?; were they in the same league as with Putin is doing with Trump? What codespeak are you talking about? You mean policies you don't personally like?
MicroBerto · 9 years ago
What millions? How about these:
https://wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/8396
https://wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/22030#efmABAADK...
What Russia family connections? How about these:
https://wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/927 (see page 61 of the attachment)
https://wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/1127
Why the concern if there's nothing to be concerned about? (https://wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/225, https://www.wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/370)
Regarding codespeak... it's starting to go mainstream. Google what Ben Swann's been up to.
afterburner · 9 years ago
The Clinton Foundation donations were shown to be benign and not give any additional access to the Clintons. The Clinton foundation is a reputable charity that actually does good.
Or do you think that anytime money is mentioned bad things are happening? So then how do you feel about Trump?
Does simply having 'Russia' show up in a word search mean something sinister?
If you're like this about Clinton (much ado about nothing, exaggeration of any tiny mention of anything), why aren't you absolutely nuclear about Trump, who has actual solid links to actual corruption and potential treasonous behaviour?
MicroBerto · 9 years ago
Shown by who?
The Clinton Foundation does good? Like they did in Haiti, right??
It's okay, you just haven't dug deep enough. The key is understanding where the proposed pipelines are located. Hint: they're in line with various overthrown governments; not coincidental.
Note that I'm not saying you should dig any deeper, as it's not exactly productive time and this is the job of the investigators, but it's interesting to watch play out.
Best question lately is "Where is Eric Braverman?"...
KirinDave · 9 years ago
> Is everyone here forgetting the millions given by foreign nations??
Not terribly, since we can see where a lot of it went and we're not terribly upset with the outcomes?
> The outright collusion with media?
Yeah emails that emails went emails really emails well emails, right emails?
> The lack of sensitivity to LGBT rights?
Clinton has a mixed track record on LGBT rights, but I trust her infinitely more than I do Trump, because her recent track record is much better. If you think she'd get a free pass for screwing over the community, you're dead wrong.
> The fact that they never discussed how to actually solve the Nation's problems, only worked on crafting a message to the public, and having "public and private" policies?
It.. uh... was an election campaign, dude. They're talking about being elected. But also, there ARE a ton of emails in there talking about the policy messaging. Mostly how to frame it to different people, as framing matters.
> The family connections to Russia that everyone conveniently ignores lately?
If Russian connections were a problem Trump would be forced to step down in favor of Pence, now wouldn't he?
> Or most chilling of all, the cryptic codespeak used in several emails?
Did you use your pizzagate decoder ring to figure out where they hid the girls yet?
rjeli · 9 years ago
> Did you use your pizzagate decoder ring to figure out where they hid the girls yet?
I miss detox "week".
KirinDave · 9 years ago
You mean the conservative control week?
The vast majority of stories that ban filtered were about proposed human rights abuses by Trump's advisory board, and subsequent details about how foreign intelligence agencies helped the conservative candidate without the hobble of campaign finance laws or ethical considerations.
Or are you mad I'm here, being pugnacious and irreverent about the more absurd allegations leveled against various candidates (which I have done on behalf of Trump as well, if you check my post history far enough).
What, exactly, do you miss? And if so, why then did you click into this thread and read into something nested 3 deep?
I submit if you cast a vote in this country you should not be afforded the luxury of looking away from the results of that vote.
rjeli · 9 years ago
No, I am not mad you are criticizing conservatives, nor do I think we should be ignorant of politics. I was struck by the nastiness of that part of your comment, that it was a personal, dismissive insult.
KirinDave · 9 years ago
So was implying that arbitrarily assigned "code words" were evidence of a child abuse ring which was so hyped to a group of people that it lead to a physical confrontation with an armed individual in public.
"Code words" is pizzagate talk, even if you're not aware of that. It's the literal phrasing echoed throughout twitter and gab used to justify arbitrary accusations.
I'm not sure how you can treat that kind of nasty and totally senseless fear mongering with anything but irreverence.
MicroBerto · 9 years ago
At this point, I'd only like to know why you're making personal attacks on someone you've never met in order to support and defend a politician who's committed federal crimes -- one who you've likely also never met.
Might be time to step back and take a deep breath, my friend.
Have you actually read the emails in question? I've referenced them elsewhere in this thread.
KirinDave · 9 years ago
I've read most of the Wikileaks materials. I've taken them with a grain of salt because there is strong evidence that Assange does not have control of Wikileaks, and therefore it's very difficult to trust the entirely of the corpus.
Even if I take all of them as 100% verified, I am certainly not "chilled" the way you are. Nor do I think having IT fuckups should be a federal crime. Given how shit both R and D party security is, I suspect the private email servers are actually afforded a bit of security by being obscure.
And the only aspersion I've thrown your way is that this allegation of "codespeak" is rubbish and lead people to dangerous actions on the grounds of "PizzaGate". I don't agree with your picture of reality, but I think you're an adult capable of recognizing this and therefore should be responsible for your viewpoints in a public discussion forum you choose to engage in.
If I didn't feel that way, I wouldn't reply. You wouldn't be responsible for your actions.
MicroBerto · 9 years ago
> Given how shit both R and D party security is...
Ummm, since we're now talking about the private email server (still absolutely illegal, regardless of justification), we're not talking about DNC leaks here, so this has nothing to do with "D" and "R".
That ClintonEmail.com server should have been in the STATE DEPARTMENT behind government firewalls, heavily monitored by our government's cybersecurity division.
> I suspect the private email servers are actually afforded a bit of security by being obscure.
WOW!!! Are you listening to yourself?! That's demonstrably been proven to be completely false (ClintonEmail.com is not exactly a "obscure" domain, BTW) -- and by her team's own admission, as there was hack attempt after hack attempt:
* http://www.judicialwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/JW-v...
* http://www.judicialwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/JW-v...
* http://www.judicialwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/JW-v...
Then, of course, there was this quote:
> Finally, we learned there is a confidence from these sources that her server had been hacked. And that it was a 99% accuracy that it had been hacked by at least five foreign intelligence agencies, and that things had been taken from that.
But, "you suspect".
How about this: I suspect that they setup a private email server to keep out of the reach of FOIA attempts, because of Lord knows what scandals would have been unearthed. Those emails are out there, many of them possibly on the Weiner laptop or elsewhere, and time will tell if there will ever be any justice served for these Federal crimes.
KirinDave · 9 years ago
> That ClintonEmail.com server should have been in the STATE DEPARTMENT behind government firewalls, heavily monitored by our government's cybersecurity division.
Which is a token gesture and we all know it. Most private companies have better cybersecurity than the "STATE DEPARTMENT."
> That's demonstrably been proven to be completely false (ClintonEmail.com is not exactly a "obscure" domain, BTW) -- and by her team's own admission, as there was hack attempt after hack attempt:
Email servers ... seeing hack attempts via direct and content-driven means? WOW. THAT ONLY HAPPENS TO STATE OFFICIALS! MY EMAILS CERTAINLY HAVE NEVER SEEN MALICIOUS LINKS.
> I suspect that they setup a private email server to keep out of the reach of FOIA attempts, because of Lord knows what scandals would have been unearthed.
I hope that you extend this righteous anger to Pence and the Trump campaign for doing everything they can to keep campaign planning materials hidden by (curiously) successfully invoking attorney-client privilege.
peteretep · 9 years ago
> I'd only like to know why
> you're making personal
> attacks
I don't see any personal attacks? He's mocking your delusional and dull talking points, not you.gm-conspiracy · 9 years ago
Please don't forget Aaron Swartz.
dopamean · 9 years ago
Dumping tons of classified documents in the way that she did is not whistleblowing. I think Obama did the right thing here but not because she was a whistleblower (she's not).
eevilspock · 9 years ago
"Just in: President Barack Obama has largely commuted Chelsea Manning's remaining prison sentence. She has been jailed for nearly seven years, and her 35-year sentence was by far the longest punishment ever imposed in the United States for a leak conviction."
- The Marshall Project
https://www.facebook.com/TheMarshallProject.org/posts/186396...
I highly recommend subscribing to the Marshall Project Opening Statement: https://www.themarshallproject.org/subscribe
egberts1 · 9 years ago
Except that Chelsea did not exercise the Whistleblower Act.
nxc18 · 9 years ago
President Obama inherited all of those "bad" things you mention.
The real problem with all of those things is that they are politically impossible to roll back, unless the perceived cost exceeds the perceived benefit. Until your best friend ends up on a kill list, that isn't going to happen.
Imagine the following scenario: President Obama ends NSA spying, kills the drone problem, gets rid of kill lists (and presumably also killing), and stops torture (the one and only useless thing on this list). Following that, any terrorism-related incident occurs. The right destroys him for weakening our country (as they are already doing regardless). The left destroys him for weakening our country. And the trick is, predator drones, kill lists, and presumably NSA spying (which will be even more useful with the newly announced inter-agency collaboration) all do help achieve our foreign policy goals (mostly dead terrorists). They also help achieve our domestic policy goals, which partially include not having lots of deployed soldiers dying.
We can't even roll back the TSA, which is widely known to be useless, despite long waits, missed flights, thefts, bizarre restrictions, and all the other things people love about post-9/11 air travel.
For better or worse (mostly for worse), "the American voter" does not care in the slightest about scary brown people being killed (usually deservedly) in a desert half a world away.
President Obama is doing what the American people want, and right now that means commuting sentences, spying, and killing people in the desert.
rayiner · 9 years ago
> President Obama inherited all of those "bad" things you mention.
I agree Obama is doing what the American people want, but he did not inherit all of these programs. E.g. he substantially expanded the program for drone strikes: http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2016/01/12/reflecting-o...
Retra · 9 years ago
Drone strike programs will expand everywhere for the foreseeable future, regardless of what Obama did.
They're a nearly ideal weapon. There isn't a military on this planet that would not choose to employ them over almost any other tactic.
bb611 · 9 years ago
I appreciate many of your points but this:
> No one has the actual Pentagon Papers outside of very specific news agencies
is patently false, they're available in full from the National Archives: https://www.archives.gov/research/pentagon-papers
There are very good arguments made elsewhere in this thread about releasing in full vs. releasing to a group that has the ability and willingness to appropriately vet documents before release. Certainly Wikileaks' blanket release caused a large amount of unnecessary controversy that could have been strategically avoided, and would have served as less distraction from the issues presented in them.
austincheney · 9 years ago
It's not really whistle blowing though if you find evidence of 1 crime and then then choose to release 700,000 unrelated other documents with it. It is just a crime. During the trial the defense didn't even pretend that this was whistle blowing.
Also, intention is relevant in criminal law. Was the intention to right a wrong or to throw a depression induced tantrum? There was a substantial amount of evidence on this matter.
knodi123 · 9 years ago
> Chelsea will still have this conviction
As if anybody will ever do a background check and say "gasp, you have a conviction".
k-mcgrady · 9 years ago
>> I wish people would see this manipulation
Is it really manipulation? Most/all world leaders have done a lot of good and a lot of bad. You can be angry at both the outgoing and incoming administration. There is no need to pick sides. Hopefully commuting this sentence will decrease any deterrence the administration has given to whistleblowers, because we need them to hold our governments accountable more than ever. Any checks and balances we think we have don't seem to be working.
philliphaydon · 9 years ago
Manning will be released May this year tho. It's 35 years which includes time already served (7) and she was due for release in 2040.
pbreit · 9 years ago
What was chilling about the Hillary emails? They seemed quite inoffensive to me.
NotSammyHagar · 9 years ago
The pentagon papers were released in 2011. A wikipedia search would have found the complete set at the national archives: https://www.archives.gov/research/pentagon-papers.
I believe they wanted to keep this secret not because it hurt us to leak some secret, it was to hide the fact that every president from Truman on had lied about their actions to get us more involved in vietnam. It's still pretty shocking today. Read the wikipedia page for more info.
I don't think it will happen, but I'd be happy if Obama were somehow able to legally forgive Snowden for his whistle blowing also.
gk1 · 9 years ago
For anyone else who was curious:
Commute - reduce (a judicial sentence, especially a sentence of death) to one less severe.
mtgx · 9 years ago
It's too bad it took a presidential order to commute her sentence to 8 years, when it probably should've been the longest sentence she should've gotten by default, if not much less, if she even had to be jailed in the first place. I think she only got imprisoned for so long because that's how the military operates. Right or wrong, they want to set an example of soldiers that something like this, so that others aren't encouraged to do the same.
Also, too bad Obama didn't pardon Snowden. He should have.
nueded · 9 years ago
This made me genuinely happy. Thanks, Obama. For real.
pavlov · 9 years ago
Manning will be released in May this year, just after Trump's first 100 days in office. It's almost like Obama is timing this as a reminder of himself at a point in the future where it's bound to provide maximum irritation to his successor. (I don't think that's the actual intention, but we can definitely look forward to some interesting tweetstorms from Trump in May.)
symlinkk · 9 years ago
And now let's see if Assange keeps his promise to extradite to the US. https://twitter.com/wikileaks/status/819630102787059713
sp332 · 9 years ago
The US hasn't asked him to be extradited, so that seems moot.
aburan28 · 9 years ago
The Grand Jury Indictment has not been made public. Assange is playing off that fact with his statement
LordKano · 9 years ago
Commuting Manning's sentence without pardoning Snowden feels like politics to me.
Manning's actions embarrassed the Bush administration so Obama will commute.
Snowden's actions embarrassed the Obama administration so Obama won't pardon.
arbitrage · 9 years ago
Chelsea Manning stood trial. Edward Snowden did not.
LordKano · 9 years ago
Standing trial isn't a prerequisite for a pardon. Nixon never stood trial either.
saalweachter · 9 years ago
It is not a prerequisite for a pardon, but it does serve the government's interests.
Pre-emptively pardoning Snowden before he spends a day in prison sends the signal that the government isn't going to punish people for leaking, so go right ahead.
Commuting Manning's sentence after seven years still leaves a pretty harsh warning for future leakers (is leaking that information worth seven years of your life?) while showing a degree of mercy to the individual (I mean, not the degree of mercy that commuting after 2 or 3 or 6 years would be...).
Regardless of what you think Obama's secret inner beliefs and motivations are, I think it is reasonable to assume that as Commander in Chief and President of the United States he wants the people he entrusts with secrets to keep keeping them.
noobermin · 9 years ago
This has been discussed before. A President can pardon people for crimes they may be charged with in the future.
ceejayoz · 9 years ago
Yes, but politically, "we dropped her sentence to seven years in jail" is more tenable than "we pardoned someone who never stood trial nor served a day in jail".
noobermin · 9 years ago
Valid point. The possibility is real, but the difficulty you highlighted may make it less likely.
Not that there is no precedent of course (Nixon).
randcraw · 9 years ago
So don't pardon Snowden. Commute the charges against him. Like 97% of the cases that go to prosecution in this country, let him plea to a lesser crime and serve a 10 year sentence, minus time served in Russia.
ptaipale · 9 years ago
Edit: Sorry, this was rubbish, I was thinking of Assange not Snowden. -- Note that charges (technically, a European Arrest Warrant in order to get him for questioning) against Snowden have not been made by the U.S. but by Sweden, for a suspected rape. So Obama definitely cannot commute them in any way.
There is no extradition request to the U.S., so when fighting an extradition to U.S., Snowden is beating a straw man.
DarqWebster · 9 years ago
That's Julian Assange, not Edward Snowden.
ptaipale · 9 years ago
Sorry. Yes of course. Thanks.
dragonwriter · 9 years ago
> So don't pardon Snowden. Commute the charges against him.
Commutation is reduction of sentence, it can only happen after conviction.
> Like 97% of the cases that go to prosecution in this country, let him plea to a lesser crime
Is there any indication that Snowden has any interest in pleading guilty to anything?
ChrisBland · 9 years ago
The good ole Nixon pardon
notahacker · 9 years ago
There's also the small matter of Snowden currently being holed up in Russia, even if it probably wasn't his intended destination and he hasn't actually provided them with any useful information.
amyjess · 9 years ago
Manning was also being mistreated in prison, and that mistreatment would be very likely to get worse under a Trump administration. If Clinton won, a commutation would have been much less likely.
It's worth repeating that while Obama commuted her sentence, he didn't pardon her. What he did was say "she's been punished enough", and it's entirely consistent to say that Manning has been punished enough but Snowden hasn't.
barneygumble742 · 9 years ago
Obama has said that the two cases are different in that Manning has gone through the legal system, sentenced, and serving time, whereas Snowden is in a country that doesn't have an extradition treaty with the US and hasn't been tried under the US legal system.
uxp · 9 years ago
Specifically, one cannot be pardoned or have a sentence commuted of a crime one has not been convicted of. Snowden has not been convicted nor even tried for any crime. It's impossible for Obama to do anything about his situation.
CoryG89 · 9 years ago
This is not true. The courts found that a president can pardon a supposed crime before charges have even been filed, as well as any time before or after trial/conviction.
This was the case with Ford's pardoning of Nixon, as well as Carter's pardoning of all those who avoided the draft during the Vietnam war.
i_don_t_know · 9 years ago
That's not quite true either. According to https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/236/79/case.html
"There are substantial differences between legislative immunity and a pardon; the latter carries an imputation of guilt and acceptance of a confession of it,[..]"
You can only be pardoned if you have committed a crime. You have to either confess or admit your crime, or be tried, or at least be charged with a crime.
Nixon confessed and admitted that he was guilty. We wasn't tried, maybe not even charged, but he admitted wrongdoing.
As far as I know, Snowden has not admitted that he's guilty of a crime, he hasn't been tried, and he hasn't been charged. So from a legal point of view, he hasn't committed any crime and cannot be pardoned.
LordKano · 9 years ago
Nixon confessed and admitted that he was guilty.
[Citation Needed]
I have never seen or even heard of any such confession from Nixon.
i_don_t_know · 9 years ago
Good point! I was under the impression that he had admitted that he was guilty in some form. It's unclear to me now if he did. I don't know if anything he's said and done in the aftermath may be considered an admission of guilt. So my previous comment might be incorrect.
It's also unclear if a pending impeachment might be considered a "conviction" if it's just a likely outcome and not an actual impeachment.
iaw · 9 years ago
I disagree. Manning's intent and actions are far short of those of Snowden.
Snowden leaked information on valid espionage programs and possibly gave Russia the keys to the castle when he fled the country. I used to think Snowden deserved a pardon, and had it only been about the warrantless wiretapping I would still feel that way, but he leaked a number of things that damaged US relations in ways that have been highly beneficial to Russia.
I think Snowden is both a patriot and a traitor for what he did.
ryanlol · 9 years ago
>possibly gave Russia the keys to the castle when he fled the country
Might as well claim that he possibly coordinated the 9/11 attacks. It's also possible that he's secretly really old and shot Kennedy.
There hasn't been a shred of evidence presented supporting these claims, and if you're going to make the claim you should back it up somehow.
iaw · 9 years ago
For one, I don't appreciate your reductio ad absurdum[1] approach to discussion. Snowden would also have to be "secretly really old" to coordinate the 9/11 attacks and even then the claim is patently absurd.
Snowden had a cache of encrypted intelligence data. Intelligence agencies are fully capable of cracking encryption when properly motivated (in some cases they've backdoored them preemptively).
Ewen MacAskill, living in Europe and possessing the cache, would make a prime target for Russian intelligence. There is no proof that the Russians have his cache, but it's asinine to think that they don't given their overall espionage efforts.
ionised · 9 years ago
He handed off his entire cache of documents to journalists while he was in Hong Kong and before he reached Russia. He also didn't read every single one, the journalists were responsible for combing through most of the data to determine what to release and what to redact.
So knowing those two things, you can't credibly claim he handed Russia anything. Whatever Russia has, they obtained from the newspapers just like the rest of us.
arbitrage · 9 years ago
She. Not they. Chelsea Manning identifies as female.
ishields · 9 years ago
Come on now, "They" does not imply any gender and is appropriate to describe any person
and0 · 9 years ago
I thought the same thing but there's no way a native English speaker would use "they" in that context otherwise. It made me have to go back and see if Wikileaks in general was being referenced.
DanBC · 9 years ago
I'm a native English speaker. I tend to use "they", and I would have used it in that sentence.
Not all native English speakers got an American English education.
ghostly_s · 9 years ago
In this context, it reads as a refusal to accept usage of her preferred pronoun.
quirkafleeg · 9 years ago
To be fair, I think the commenter would have just used "he" in that case.
ishields · 9 years ago
That's a valid interpretation, but it's based on assumptions. Personally I didn't even notice the use of "they" vs "he" or "she" since it's not really relevant to the discussion. In fact, OP has clarified that he/she used "they" only because they were unsure if gender changes apply retroactively since at the time of the leaks, manning identified as a "he"
losteric · 9 years ago
It also reads as someone who understands the pronoun issue, but doesn't understand the temporal rules around pronouns. Instead, just opting for the traditional gender-neutral pronoun.
There's a lot of different perspectives and opinions, and honestly the rules aren't clear cut yet. At this point I pretty much always refer to people as "them" online.
gnaritas · 9 years ago
It is not other people's responsibility to know what your preferred pronoun is; you don't have a right to a preferred pronoun; you don't get to tell other people how they should speak. They is perfectly appropriate in all situations as it is gender neutral.
bmuon · 9 years ago
Sorry, non-native speaker here. But wouldn't "they" apply when you don't know when the gender of the person? In this case you do know.
ishields · 9 years ago
"They" is the only option when you don't know the gender of the person but it is still valid even if you do know the gender, though less commonly used in that situation
27182818284 · 9 years ago
Traditionally in US schools you were taught that applying "they" to a non-plural was outright incorrect—as in, a student would lose points if used that way on homework growing up.
When you don't know the gender, however, it is really convenient to use "they", so albeit the incorrect form, with time it started to take hold. Lately gender politics have acted as a catalyst as some people outright tell you they prefer that you use the "they/them" pronouns. Since a lot of folks are already comfortable using they/them, it works.
A different tactic is to just substitute something else entirely. Books like On Writing encourage young writers to avoid the situation and try to substitute other words rather than use "they" or just default to "he." An example might be using the word "writer". For example the books recommends instead of using "He should learn to use semicolons only when absolutely necessary" use "The writer should learn to use..." instead.
I think the latter method is harder in non-formal threads like this. "The imprisoned already has served 7 years" works, but comes across as really impersonal.
cderwin · 9 years ago
From a grammatical perspective it should be noted that "they" is plural. It is gender-neutral, but should only be used when referring to multiple people. The correct gender-neutral singular pronoun is "he or she".
etjossem · 9 years ago
"They" can be used in the singular, and many communities use it in that manner frequently! Merriam-Webster has a great piece on this. [1]
[1] https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/singular-nonbi...
grzm · 9 years ago
Singular they is indeed a thing:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singular_they
Whether it's applicable in this case is another question.
vinay427 · 9 years ago
The singular "they" has been used for centuries and is currently somewhat socially acceptable, especially when the gender of the person in question is unknown or disputed.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_neutrality_in_English#P...
arbitrage · 9 years ago
The gender of the person in question is not unknown, and doesn't need to be disputed. Chelsea Manning identifies as female.
nilved · 9 years ago
The person you're replying to said "especially." It is also valid when the gender is known.
gnaritas · 9 years ago
It doesn't matter what she identifies as, they is appropriate in all cases male or female.
minitech · 9 years ago
“they” is an acceptable pronoun for any person; it is gender-neutral.
na85 · 9 years ago
"They" is perfectly acceptable since it is gender-neutral.
nilved · 9 years ago
"They" is a perfectly cromulent pronoun for women.
rthomas6 · 9 years ago
Sorry. I didn't know which pronoun to use because I didn't know if gender changes apply retroactively, grammatically speaking. I'm having trouble knowing which one to use to write this post, too. At the time of the leaks Chelsea Manning identified as Bradley, a male. Is it politically correct to use 'she' for all past references, including the times where Chelsea Manning identified as male? Or would it make more sense to use 'he' when Chelsea Manning identified as male, and 'she' when Chelsea Manning identifies as female?
and0 · 9 years ago
Very understandable. I believe pronouns apply retroactively.
adrienne · 9 years ago
She was always a woman; she just presented as a man for many years. The NYT presented the information quite well when they said, "Ms. Manning was still known as Bradley Manning when she deployed with her unit to Iraq in late 2009."
Prophasi · 9 years ago
There's obviously no objective truth to whether pronouns apply retroactively; it's just social convention.
Clearly, it's polite to respect someone's wishes when talking to or about them, whether it's pronouns, nicknames, personal space, or umpteen other things. If you're introducing Chelsea to another friend, it seems only civil and natural to say "she [not he] was stationed at Fort Drum!"
However, I don't think a person can unilaterally require that the world around them retroactively change all references to a historical event, particularly when it renders some of those details nonsensical or wrong. History is written: documents were released by a person calling himself "Bradley Manning" and identifying as (and meeting biological criteria of) a male. Other aspects of the story -- from Manning's all-male combat team to his quarters in the USDB -- hinge on that fact. Manning's presence doesn't imply that the military unit was mixed-gender. One version reports the story as it was known to everyone involved; the other modifies it after the fact according to the unilateral wishes of the subject being reported on. That's not a good pattern, I don't think.
As an outsize example, if George W. Bush transitions to a female this year, the US will not celebrate that we've had our first female president.
I'm completely sympathetic to interpersonal civility, but empathy goes both ways; I think it's beyond the pale to expect society writ large to scramble, under penalty of being called bigots, to conform to what's frankly an unverifiable declaration of internal personal change on the order of a religious awakening (which oddly doesn't enjoy the same umbrella of unquestioned sanctimony).
dragonwriter · 9 years ago
The most accepted usage among those sensitive at all to gender identity (since the person is the same) seems to be to use the current pronouns for all references to the person, even if they are to times before their current gender identity was generally recognized by others (or even formed clearly, though only the former is arguably relevant in this discussion of Manning.)
> At the time of the leaks Chelsea Manning identified as Bradley, a male.
Manning's first discussion with a gender counselor about identifying as a woman was a couple months before her first contact with WikiLeaks; presumably there was some time lapse between recognizing the identity and talking to a counselor. So, from the evidence available, I don't think it's correct that Manning identified as male at the time of the leaks.
sctb · 9 years ago
We detached this subthread from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13421564 and marked it off-topic.
and0 · 9 years ago
Off-topic but.. "they"? Manning isn't a group of people. Just say "she", it's really easy.
khazhou · 9 years ago
They == people in govt with access to this info.
ForrestN · 9 years ago
I don't know what Chelsea Manning's pronoun preferences are, but I have plenty of friends who prefer "they," which also happens to be the gender-neutral singular pronoun in English.
For example: "Someone came by asking for me earlier? Did they give you a name?"
Many people who do not identify as male or female prefer "they."
and0 · 9 years ago
That's a valid point, but if you don't know enough about Chelsea Manning's recent history or prison sentence to know her preferred pronoun (or even read the article where it's made very clear) why even comment?
mod · 9 years ago
The comment was on-topic and interesting. That's two reasons I can think of.
Also, this is not a new story, so frankly it's easy to have relevant opinions on the topic while perhaps just doing a skim of the story.
DanBC · 9 years ago
You've assumed the person using "they" did know enough about Chelsea Manning's recent history and chose to use they as some kind of statement.
You should probably be talking the the person who called her "guy", or the person who said she was forced to change gender as a punishment, (both in this thread) rather than the person who politely used "they" because they weren't sure whether to apply she to the time she was identified as male.
ForrestN · 9 years ago
Some of my trans/genderqueer friends go through long periods wherein they change their preferred pronouns, so when I don't know someone personally I try use "they" whenever I can in deference to the complexity of trans/queer experiences. My husband identifies as a man, but sometimes prefers to be referred to as "they," for example in all professional contexts. (They're an artist).
Since I don't know Chelsea personally, and because they're also in what must be a deeply traumatic and confusing situation, replete with pressure to conform to newly acceptable narratives of transition like "man becomes woman," I think I instinctively wanted to use "they" in acknowledgment that we probably can't know for sure what would make them comfortable and happy from our present vantage, news reports aside. If I for some reason meet them one day, I'll be sure to confirm with them what they prefer.
manarth · 9 years ago
Chelsea has publicly identified the preferred pronouns as "she/her/hers". [1]
[1] http://www.glaad.org/blog/chelsea-mannings-name-and-pronouns...
gnaritas · 9 years ago
So what? You can't expect people to know that, this whole preferred pronoun issue is nonsense; you do not have a right to tell other people which words they should use.
manarth · 9 years ago
You can't expect people to know that
I shared the link, so that people who weren't aware of Chelsea's preferred pronouns, could learn which pronouns she preferred. this whole preferred pronoun issue is nonsense;
you do not have a right to tell other people which words they should use.
You're right to say that in general, I cannot control the words that people use, about me, or about others.But I do respect the choices that people make. If someone would prefer that I refer to them as "she" or "her", or "him" or "he", I will use that pronoun. And I would question: why would someone use an alternative pronoun, knowing that the person would prefer an alternative? Why would anyone choose to knowingly attack and hurt someone, purely for sake of labeling them with a pronoun that the person has identified as inappropriate?
When someone has identified their preferred pronouns, it is entirely appropriate to use those pronouns, and it is inappropriate - even abusive - to deliberately choose to use an incorrect pronoun. I do state "deliberately choose to use", because there will inevitably be people who mistakenly use an incorrect pronoun, for lack of knowledge, but people who are aware of the correct pronouns and deliberately choose an incorrect pronoun are conducting a bullying, abusive attack, and should be stopped.
ForrestN · 9 years ago
Yes. I would add that, at least in present cultural conditions, most people who are not cisgendered men or women are not treated well, are chronically misunderstood, and experience traumatic alienation from their surrounding culture, and even violence. Generally speaking we're not yet able to protect non-cis people nearly as well as we should. So in addition to the parent's clear and solid advice, please have some empathy. Respecting a person's wishes about referring to their identity can go a long way toward making them feel safe, and refusing to do so can add to a tremendous burden of pain.
gnaritas · 9 years ago
> And I would question: why would someone use an alternative pronoun, knowing that the person would prefer an alternative?
The answer is quite simple, we don't always keep track of other people's preferences even when we've been told them.
> Why would anyone choose to knowingly attack and hurt someone, purely for sake of labeling them with a pronoun that the person has identified as inappropriate?
Again, just because you had a piece of information, doesn't mean it immediately comes forth in your mind at the necessary time. It's hard enough remembering the preferences of your friends, let alone public figures who you've never met. No one here likely personally knows Manning, to expect people to remember the preferences of public figures they don't know is expecting too much.
> When someone has identified their preferred pronouns, it is entirely appropriate to use those pronouns, and it is inappropriate - even abusive - to deliberately choose to use an incorrect pronoun.
No, it is not. You are placing an unjustified exception on another persons memory of your preferences, this is never appropriate.
> I do state "deliberately choose to use", because there will inevitably be people who mistakenly use an incorrect pronoun, for lack of knowledge, but people who are aware of the correct pronouns and deliberately choose an incorrect pronoun are conducting a bullying, abusive attack, and should be stopped.
This is a false dichotomy that presumes perfect memory; just because you've been told something doesn't mean you're deliberately ignoring that information when you later use the incorrect pronoun. Some people don't know, but knowing doesn't mean you deliberately intended insult when you still use it wrong. We all know lots of things that don't come to us in the necessary moments, brains aren't computers, they're fuzzy.
If your ability to cope depends on another persons choice of vocabulary, you're depending on the wrong things.
Anyone who claims to be offended by "they" is someone playing victim, they're looking for reasons to be insulted. They/them is always appropriate in all cases for all genders, it's how we avoid having to remember everyone's personal preferences.
sandyarmstrong · 9 years ago
Pronouns are interesting. I have transgender friends who prefer "they". I like to use it as a gender-neutral pronoun when I can get away with it, and hope that usage becomes more acceptable as time passes.
na85 · 9 years ago
The word "they" has more than one meaning. One of those is for a person of indeterminate or unknown gender.
For example I can and routinely do say things like "If that person wishes to do XYZ, then they must first do ABCD"
adrienne · 9 years ago
Yes, but Ms. Manning's gender is neither indeterminate nor unknown. Ms. Manning is a woman, and she has publicly stated that her pronouns are she/her. This is not difficult information to find.
lobster_johnson · 9 years ago
Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singular_they) covers this topic quite well.
manarth · 9 years ago
I agree. I would like to see people addressed by the pronoun that they prefer. For most people, their presentation gives a strong enough suggestion that I would generally use the "expected" pronouns, for their apparent presentation.
In the absence of a preference (or with people who have presented ambiguity) and no apparent expected default, I tend to use "they" (as it's as neutral a pronoun as I know how to use).
In the case of Chelsea, she has demonstrated a clear preference [1], so we should all be using the pronouns that she has chosen.
[1] http://www.glaad.org/blog/chelsea-mannings-name-and-pronouns...
sctb · 9 years ago
We detached this subthread from https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13421564 and marked it off-topic.
saycheese · 9 years ago
>> "More than a million supporters of Edward Snowden have petitioned President Barack Obama to pardon him, but the former National Security Agency contractor hasn't submitted the required documents for clemency, according to the White House."
Source: http://www.cnn.com/2017/01/17/politics/snowden-no-clemency-r...
Forms: https://www.justice.gov/pardon/application-forms
____
EDIT: Appears the only way to contact Ed is by Twitter: https://twitter.com/Snowden
iaw · 9 years ago
I agree with the Manning pardon, I don't think Snowden deserves a pardon. Manning's motives and understanding of what she was doing is worlds different than Snowden's.
Snowden sought a position to access more information for his leaks and he leaked information on valid espionage programs along side the unconstitutional ones.
Let him live out his days in Russia, he paid for it with intelligence.
gkoberger · 9 years ago
To play devil's advocate: Snowden took documents for a specific reason (to reveal US surveillance), and turned it over to legitimate journalists to decide what to release. Manning grabbed anything she could get her hands on, and uploaded it all to the world.
vvpan · 9 years ago
So you don't think Snowden has done great enough good for US citizens for anybody to consider a pardon for him?
iaw · 9 years ago
Snowden should be pardoned for his work revealing domestic wiretapping program, the other programs he leaked he should do his time for.
brilliantcode · 9 years ago
> Ms. Manning is set to be freed on May 17 of this year, rather than in 2045.
She must feel ecstatic! It's good that she will be free to live the rest of her life as the gender she feels comfortable expressing.
brilliantcode · 9 years ago
genuinely curious why my comment was downvoted? didn't expect to see so much transphobia on HN :/
edit: seriously who is doing all these drive by downvotes?
jmcgough · 9 years ago
Having already attempted suicide twice, I don't think she would have lived through 4 years of the Trump administration. Obama literally saved her life.
Zooper · 9 years ago
Yes, and he's also responsible for jeopardizing it for many, many years; this is not enough.
gargarplex · 9 years ago
What will Obama do next!
cdubzzz · 9 years ago
> “Mr. Snowden fled into the arms of an adversary, and has sought refuge in a country that most recently made a concerted effort to undermine confidence in our democracy.”
What an amazingly loaded statement that is. Russia is just a straight up "adversary" now? Infuriating.
RockyMcNuts · 9 years ago
We're friends now…Russia will hand over Snowden shortly after Trump removes sanctions…we have always been at war with Eastasia.
ivraatiems · 9 years ago
> Russia is just a straight up "adversary" now? Infuriating.
...in this context, when were they not an adversary?
messick · 9 years ago
If the OP is in his/her mid 20's, then "during their entire lifetime".
Not to be all "kids these days" about it, but millions of people read about the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Soviet Empire in their World History class, instead of living through it.
Just last week on HN I saw a comment to the effect of "I trust China over the US when it comes to political protest". That's the kind of thing people say when Tiananmen Square happened before they were born.
ptaipale · 9 years ago
> If the OP is in his/her mid 20's, then "during their entire lifetime".
If they think so, then they haven't been following news too much. Russia has been invading its neighbouring countries (friendly to the USA) and organising unrest in some of them for a decade.
nyolfen · 9 years ago
there is no obvious reason for russia to be considered an "adversary" versus merely a competing regional power in the absence of the ideological conflict of the cold war
angry_octet · 9 years ago
Tell that to the Ukranians, Georgians, Poles, Balts...
Russia may have an economy the size of Italy's, but geopolitically they are still the bear, a gangster state that seeks to disrupt all order so that they can bully on a one-to-one basis.
nyolfen · 9 years ago
tell that to the iraqis, libyans, afghanis...
emphasis on regional power in my prior comment. my heart goes out to the ukrainian people but the actions of russia are not worth escalating over with a nuclear state on the part of the american people.
angry_octet · 9 years ago
If you don't hang together you'll all hang separately.
nilved · 9 years ago
No, not "now," they've been considered an adversary for a very long time.
bgentry · 9 years ago
Not to mention that he's stranded in Russia not by choice, but because the US State Dept revoked his passport while he was in transit.
iaw · 9 years ago
How would you describe Russia? How would you describe Snowden's flight from prosecution in the US?
Russia was an adversary before the Crimean annexation, shadow wars involving Iran and Syria make that clear.
shalmanese · 9 years ago
It's also worth noting that the only reason Snowden is currently in Russia is due to actions by the US State Department. Snowden left Hong Kong with a plane ticket to Cuba by way of Moscow. While he was on the plane, the US State Department revoked his passport, forcing him to miss his connecting flight. To make it seem like it was in any way a deliberate choice on his part is rewriting history.
drawnwren · 9 years ago
If both Russia and Cuba were ok with this, what is the reason he can't just get on a plane to Cuba now?
starik36 · 9 years ago
Because last time he was suspected to be on the place, President of Bolivia's plane was forced to land in Austria. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evo_Morales_grounding_incident
shalmanese · 9 years ago
The Americans put pressure on Cuba to not admit Snowden:
"Snowden failed to board an onward flight to Cuba the next day, the paper says, again citing Russian officials, because the US put intense pressure on Cuba, warning of "adverse consequences" if Snowden were allowed to board the plane. The Cubans subsequently informed Moscow that the regular Aeroflot flight would not be permitted to land in Havana if Snowden was aboard."
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-News/2013/0826/Russian...
drawnwren · 9 years ago
So, Snowden is deliberately choosing not to go to Cuba because he will probably be deported to the US?
dom0 · 9 years ago
I'm a bit unclear how this works. How can the US revoke the passport of a citizen? WTF?
http://news.passportoffices.us/help/passport-denial-and-revo...
Passport was obtained illegally or fraudulently
Non-Payment of child support
Passport was misused or changed/altered
Passport holder’s Certificate of Naturalization or Certificate of Citizenship is cancelled
Certain drug trafficking convictions
Those convicted of sex tourism
Uhm. Okay...shalmanese · 9 years ago
"As is routine and consistent with US regulations, persons with felony arrest warrants are subject to having their passport revoked," said Psaki. "Such a revocation does not affect citizenship status."
http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/307253-repo...
wnevets · 9 years ago
What exactly did Manning blow the whistle on? While Snowden exposed what he believed was illegal spying on Americans, Manning just leaked a bunch of classified information about war that he/she believed was immoral .
egberts1 · 9 years ago
She didn't blow any whistle, much less evoke the Whistleblower Act.
plugger · 9 years ago
Did you watch Collateral Murder?
3131s · 9 years ago
A good summary that goes well beyond the collateral murder video:
https://www.thenation.com/article/long-list-what-we-know-tha...
pdkl95 · 9 years ago
With apologies to William Burroughs.
(To the whistleblowers,
in hope that they stay alive.)
Thanks for systemic corruption
and disregard for the rule of law.
Thanks for the transparent lies and
carefully framed talking points.
Thanks for the profitable arms sales
to be used against us in next year's war.
Thanks for manufactured consent.
"You all saw him. He had a gun."
Thanks for the American dream,
placing profit first until
the bare greed shines through.
Thanks for always shooting the messenger.
Thanks for hate peddling politicians,
that fear anything they don't understand.
Thanks for the surveillance state
and the war against privacy.
Thanks for another Crypto War,
while the real war criminals walk free.
Thanks for presidential pardons,
given only when politically convenient.
Thanks for defending title and flag,
betraying the oath to the Constitution.
Thanks for always taking special care
to make sure no good deed goes unpunished.
Thank you, Pres. Obama, for finally doing the bare minimum and
eventually freeing Chelsea Manning. As a long-time believer in
"better late than never", my thanks really is sincere.There is still a lot of work left to do.
gizmo385 · 9 years ago
I'm always torn on these things. Chelsea Manning did break the law. If she hadn't at least spent some time in jail, it could have potentially turned into a much larger political nightmare.
finnh · 9 years ago
1) Our government broke the law left & right. 2) Our government has outlawed leaks.
In the context of (1) the law (2) is unjust, and thus punishment is unjust.
enraged_camel · 9 years ago
>>Chelsea Manning did break the law.
So did the government. But no one from the government spent any time in prison (much less solitary confinement) for it.
pizza · 9 years ago
Why is this no longer at the top of the front page? ~900 points in ~1 hour alone. Please, mods, some transparency?
dang · 9 years ago
Users tend to flag purely political stories and moderators add downweights to them. That's part of keeping the balance on HN, which is not a primarily political site: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html.
dopamean · 9 years ago
It is a little weird to let that affect a story that is obviously of huge interest to the visitors of this site.
dragonwriter · 9 years ago
It's being flagged by people who are also users of the site, and is right at the center of a category defined as likely off-topic by the site guidelines.
While I certainly find it an interesting topic worth discussing, I think the rules and community moderation is working as advertised and as designed here.
sureshn · 9 years ago
In the last 4 years of Obama presidency the clout America had abroad has considerably reduced. Especially after the whistle blowing incident , the ruling dispensation came across as corrupt and unethical. The bargaining power was compromised greatly because of this and the whole world now knows about spying , prism , NSA etc. A Greek philosopher Diogenes I think it was or Socrates dont remember had said this awesome quote , " Pardoning treason will lead to self destruction" . This decision seems to have a strong left liberal bias unfortunately
jacobush · 9 years ago
Wait what? Pardoning treason is Standard Operating Procedure and I mean all the war mongers, Halliburtons and manufacturers of evidence of weapons of mass destruction... these treasons get automatic pardon, in fact no trial.
tibbon · 9 years ago
Any idea why he wouldn't make it effective immediately?
aburan28 · 9 years ago
Why with over 900 points and 339 comments is this item falling to #9 already? Mods?
pera · 9 years ago
Flagging probably.
grzm · 9 years ago
And it's likely tripped the "overheated discussion detector" algorithm. I don't know the details, but nearly 400 comments in 2 hours seems likely to have crossed a threshold.
dang · 9 years ago
I commented on this here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13423073.
donatj · 9 years ago
> The act of clemency could be seen as a reversal, at least in part, of the Obama administration’s unprecedented criminal crackdown on leaking
Little late…
ekianjo · 9 years ago
the white house comment about snowden is incredible. Snowden basically released evidence of wrong doing on the part of the US agencies and he is made a scapegoat while the agencies continue business as usual. Oh and tough luck he happens to be in Russia which is now on the official enemys list, while it is completely irrelevant for snowden's actions.
Daviey · 9 years ago
So Assange is booking a flight to the US now?
"If Obama grants Manning clemency Assange will agree to US extradition despite clear unconstitutionality of DoJ caseWikiLeaks added" - wikileaks [https://twitter.com/wikileaks/status/819630102787059713]
lucozade · 9 years ago
> So Assange is booking a flight to the US now?
Doubt it, he'd need to persuade the US government to seek his extradition first then convince the UK government that the US has preference over the existing EAW.
That's quite a lot of persuading to get done just to ensure that a tweet comes to fruition. My guess is that he'll either keep schtum or come up with a narrative about how US Government still cares enough about the Manning leak to want to extradite him.
I'm glad that Obama has done this but I don't think this is great for Assange. His argument is quite a bit weaker now I think.
Daviey · 9 years ago
"Assange is still happy to come to the US provided all his rights are guarenteed despite White House now saying Manning was not quid-quo-pro." - https://twitter.com/wikileaks/status/821753136692002816
iaw · 9 years ago
> Speaker Paul D. Ryan called it “outrageous.” “President Obama now leaves in place a dangerous precedent that those who compromise our national security won’t be held accountable for their crimes,” he said in a statement.
Didn't GWB pardon Karl Rove for blowing the cover of a CIA agent? I feel like I'm not making that up.
dopamean · 9 years ago
What a clown. She has been held accountable. 7 years in Florence isn't nothing.
Edit: to answer your question... I don't think Rove was pardoned of anything. Libby did have his sentence commuted though.
jotadambalakiri · 9 years ago
I am surprised to see no 'WINNING' from Breitbart.
intrasight · 9 years ago
The extensive, reasoned, considerate discussion in HN on this complex topic makes me happy and gives me hope. HN is a modern iteration of the traditional literary salon.
Freedom is not free. Whistle-blowers pay a heavy price individually for the freedom of others. And Whistle-blower cases are rarely clear-cut.
LargeCompanies · 9 years ago
This is great ... his life compared to Snowden has been horrid!
On a different note I never bought he wants to be a woman just a PR thing to keep his name, plight and fight in the public eye. Maybe in five years or so his story will be told and we will see him as a him not a woman.
*This is getting downvoted? I'm sure your now aware of fake news which is created to push agendas and or make money. Thus, I don't believe much of what I see and read and this always seemed far-fetch to me and that it was so out there at the time that it was made up by those helping him. It allowed him to fight for transgender rights and remain in the public eye ... what other way could Manning in solitary confinement have maintained his visibility in the public and coral as much help to free him? This was great PR ... from someone who has created fake news and such to benefit their start up!
caryhartline · 9 years ago
There is literally no reason to believe Chelsea lied about being transgender.
When you consider the current extremely negative views that the U.S military and the average Americans have against transgender people then it would be a terrible strategy to make up such a story.
dragonwriter · 9 years ago
> On a different note I never bought he wants to be a woman just a PR thing to keep his name, plight and fight in the public eye.
Once again, the information that became public from the military through the trial was that Manning met with a gender counselor about gender dysphoria before collecting and leaking information, much less being in the public eye. This is a fact that is not in dispute.
> This is getting downvoted?
Yes, when you try to spin a completely unsupported fantasy that is inconsistent with the well-documented historical sequence of events to justify misgendering someone, that's not really a valuable contribution to the discussion.
NotSammyHagar · 9 years ago
Also I haven't heard anyone talk about how the UN and outside observers stated that Manning was tortured during her (not sure of the right pronoun, for pre-operative) prison time before the trial. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/mar/12/bradley-mannin.... That should never happen, even if you are guilty. This happened with Obama was president. I know he has a mixed record, but I have never understood his aspect of not being able to change the military-spy-industrial complex more. I don't believe he's afraid of them. I just think he has so much stuff to do, to face up to, one person can't change it all.
Well, we can work toward changing it, if we elect people who want to change.
easychewie · 9 years ago
Serious question: if Manning thought he was a rabbit, how many people would refer to him as one?
neotek · 9 years ago
Changing species isn't the same thing as changing gender, and it's an insane comparison to draw.
geff82 · 9 years ago
This is good news. Manning committed a crime (giving away info from the government which she was thought to protect), but it does not justify destroying a life. She served well beyond enough time behind bars, too many years for my taste, so my soul says is great she is released. If now the prison time for more ordinary people could be reduced to more European-human lenghts.
phoobot · 9 years ago
Finally!
dandare · 9 years ago
I was always missing a single website dedicated to the outcome of Manning's leaks. Listing cause by cause in a clear design that can be posted as a reply to all that say what Manning did was wrong. Maybe one day I will build such website and I will start with this list: https://www.thenation.com/article/long-list-what-we-know-tha...
phoobot · 9 years ago
How can this be so far down in the list?
tripzilch · 9 years ago
> “Chelsea Manning is somebody who went through the military criminal justice process,
it was torture. you can give it names but it was torture. your criminal justice process involves torture.
> was exposed to due process
naked torture
> was found guilty, was sentenced for her crimes, and she acknowledged wrongdoing,” he said. “Mr. Snowden fled into the arms of an adversary and has sought refuge in a country that most recently made a concerted effort to undermine confidence in our democracy.”
I am so disgusted right now. Why do they even pretend.